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Binocular vision and spatial perception on 4- and 5-month-old infants.
60
Citations
51
References
1986
Year
Spatial PerceptionDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceDisparity-insensitive InfantsInfant PerceptionCognitionDisparity-sensitive InfantsVisual Cognitive NeurosciencePsychologySocial SciencesEarly VisionVisual CognitionCognitive DevelopmentBinocular DisparityPerception SystemCognitive ScienceOphthalmologyEarly Childhood DevelopmentVision ResearchVisual ProcessingExperimental PsychologyInfant CognitionChild DevelopmentVisual FunctionInfant DevelopmentEye TrackingPediatricsSpatial CognitionMedicine
Four experiments investigated the relation between the development of binocular vision and infant spatial perception. Experiments 1 and 2 compared monocular and binocular depth perception in 4- and 5-month-old infants. Infants in both age groups reached more consistently for the nearer of two objects under binocular viewing conditions than under monocular viewing conditions. Experiments 3 and 4 investigated whether the superiority of binocular depth perception in 4-month-olds is related to the development of sensitivity to binocular disparity. Under binocular viewing conditions in Experiment 3, infants identified as disparity-sensitive reached more consistently for the nearer object than did infants identified as disparity-insensitive. The two groups' performances did not differ under monocular viewing conditions. These results suggest that, binocularly, the disparity-sensitive infants perceived the objects' distances more accurately than did the disparity-insensitive infants. In Experiment 4, infants were habituated to an object, then presented with the same object and a novel object that differed only in size. Disparity-sensitive infants showed size constancy by recovering from habituation when viewing the novel object. Disparity-insensitive infants did not show clear evidence of size constancy. These findings suggest that the development of sensitivity to binocular disparity is accompanied by a substantial increase in the accuracy of infant spatial perception.
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