Publication | Open Access
Look who’s talking: pre-verbal infants’ perception of face-to-face and back-to-back social interactions
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Citations
19
References
2010
Year
Adult ActorsLanguage DevelopmentEducationEarly Childhood LanguageInfant PerceptionCommunicationDevelopmental Psychology11-Month Old InfantsChild LanguageLanguage AcquisitionCognitive DevelopmentSocial-emotional DevelopmentConversation AnalysisVerbal InteractionChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesSocial SkillsEarly Childhood DevelopmentSocial InteractionBack-to-back Social InteractionsInfant CognitionSocial CognitionChild DevelopmentHuman CommunicationInterpersonal CommunicationInfant DevelopmentHuman InteractionArtsNonverbal Communication
Four-, 6-, and 11-month old infants were presented with movies in which two adult actors conversed about everyday events, either by facing each other or looking in opposite directions. Infants from 6 months of age made more gaze shifts between the actors, in accordance with the flow of conversation, when the actors were facing each other. A second experiment demonstrated that gaze following alone did not cause this difference. Instead the results are consistent with a social cognitive interpretation, suggesting that infants perceive the difference between face-to-face and back-to-back conversations and that they prefer to attend to a typical pattern of social interaction from 6 months of age.
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