Visual development Flashcards

1
Q

Preferential looking paradigm

A

takes advantage of infants’
preference to look at “interesting” things. 2 stimuli presented side-by-side
If the baby looks longer at one stimulus
than the other, it means that:
1. they can distinguish between the two
2. have a preference for one over the other
Prefer familiar and/or complex stimuli

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2
Q

Habituation Paradigm

A

Paradigm takes advantage of babies’ natural preference for novelty.
Habituation phase: repeatedly present infant with a stimulus until
they habituate to it
Test: Present habituated, “old” stimulus with a new stimulus
Dishabituation: If the baby shows greater interest in the new stimulus,
they can tell the difference between the two
Prefer novel stimuli

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3
Q

Familiarity vs. Novelty

A

In general, infants show a preference for familiar stimuli BUT Prolonged/ repeated exposure to a stimulus will cause infants to shift their preference to a novel stimulus. length of exposure time determines whether an infant
will show a familiarity or novelty preference

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4
Q

Why is visual acuity poor at birth

A

Due to immaturity of cone cells in infants’ retinas (light sensitive neurons involved in seeing fine details and colours)

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5
Q

When do babies get adult-like visual acuity ?

A

around 8 months old

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6
Q

Can newborns see colors?

A

no, see in grey scale

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7
Q

When do babies start seeing colors vs when do they have adult-like colour perception

A
  • 2 months: colour vision appears
  • 5 months: adult-like colour perception
    -Due to maturity of cones and visual cortex
    -Can discriminate between colour categories and between hues of the
    same colour
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8
Q

Explain how visual scanning evolves in infancy

A
  • From birth: infants scan their visual environment and pause to look
    at something but hard to track moving stimuli because eye movements are jerky
  • 4 months: able to smoothly track moving objects if moving slowly
  • 8 months: adult-like visual scanning
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9
Q

Face perception: top heavy

A

When show normal face and top heavy “face” look equally at them. Suggests that preference for faces simply result of general preference
for stimuli that are “top-heavy” rather than “bottom-heavy”

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10
Q

What is perceptual narrowing

A

Tuning of perceptual mechanisms to the specific sensory inputs that
infants encounter in their daily life

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11
Q

What is perceptual narrowing a result of?

A

synaptic pruning: Elimination of synapses to increase the efficiency
of neural communication. “use it or lose it” principle

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12
Q

What are evidences of perceptual narrowing in face perception

A
  • Infants becoming face specialists: 6 months old is as good at distinguishing human face vs monkey face but 9month old can distinguish between 2 human faces but struggle to distinguish between 2 monkey faces
  • Infants demonstrate the other-race-effect: 3 month olds: distinguish between faces of all races but 9 month olds: can only distinguish between faces of own race
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13
Q

If infant is equally exposed to faces of different races, will it show the “other-race-effect”

A

No! Not innate, but rather exposure effect

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14
Q

At what age do infants become face specialists as a result of perceptual narrowing?

A

9 months

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15
Q

What is perceptual consistency

A

The perception of objects as being constant in size, shape, colour. etcin spite of physical differences in the retinal image of the object

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16
Q

Is perceptual consistency present from birth?

A

Yes. Evidence from cubes study

17
Q

Is object segregation innate?

A

Not innate, has to be learned
with experience. Evidence from rod moving behind box. Newborns don’t know if 1 rod or 2 different rods, look at both for as long. 4 months old look at 1 rod longer.

18
Q

What is the sensitive period for binocular vision

A

birth to age 3
* If infants do not receive normal visual input until age 3, they may fail
to develop normal binocular vision and have life-long difficulties with
depth perception

19
Q

At what age do newborns start perceiving monocular depth cues (depth cues perceived with one eye)

A

Perceived at 6-7 months old. needs to be developed through experience