Developmental psychology

How Infants’ Viewing of Natural Scenes Changes as They Grow

Updated

Abstract

Infants' eye movements become increasingly systematic and predictable as they grow, with a sample size of 54.

  • The study involved a racially diverse group of 4- to 12-month-old infants, including 27 boys and 30 infants from various backgrounds.
  • Infants' fixation patterns on natural scenes showed greater consistency and adult-like behavior as they aged.
  • Correlations between infants' fixations and saliency increased over the age range, but the variance explained by salience decreased.
  • At younger ages, infants' fixation patterns were largely influenced by attention to physically salient areas.
  • By 12 months, infants' fixations became more systematic, indicating that their attention extended beyond physical salience.

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