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Three-quarter view preference for three-dimensional objects in 8-month-old infants.

Wakayo Yamashita1, Ryosuke Niimi, So Kanazawa

  • 1Department of Information Science and Biomedical Engineering, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Kagoshima University, Kagoshima, Japan.

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|April 8, 2014
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Summary

Infants aged 6 to 8 months show developing visual perception of 3D objects. Older infants (240 days) demonstrated adult-like object view preferences, suggesting visual development in this age group.

Keywords:
canonical viewdevelopmentnonface objectobject orientationobject perceptionobject viewthree-quarter view

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Area of Science:

  • Developmental psychology
  • Cognitive neuroscience
  • Infant visual perception

Background:

  • Adults exhibit view-dependent object recognition, preferring three-quarter views.
  • Sensitivity to object orientation varies with viewing angle in adults.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if infants aged 6 to 8 months share adult-like visual perception characteristics for 3D objects.
  • To determine the developmental trajectory of object view perception in early infancy.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized preferential looking paradigms to assess infant visual behavior.
  • Experiment 1 measured orientation change sensitivity in 190- to 240-day-old infants.
  • Experiment 2 assessed preferential looking for three-quarter object views in infants.

Main Results:

  • 240-day-old infants displayed adult-like object view perception for certain objects.
  • 190-day-old infants did not exhibit similar object view perception patterns.
  • Evidence suggests a developmental shift in 3D object perception between 190 and 240 days of age.

Conclusions:

  • Infant visual perception of three-dimensional objects undergoes development between 6 and 8 months of age.
  • The findings indicate that 240-day-old infants' object perception partially resembles adult patterns.
  • This study highlights a critical period for the maturation of 3D object recognition in human infants.