Ayuda
Ir al contenido

Dialnet


Resumen de Infants' Selective Attention to Reliable Visual Cues in the Presence of Salient Distractors

Kristen Swan Tummeltshammer, Denis Mareschal, Natasha Z. Kirkham

  • With many features competing for attention in their visual environment, infants must learn to deploy attention toward informative cues while ignoring distractions. Three eye tracking experiments were conducted to investigate whether 6- and 8-month-olds (total N = 102) would shift attention away from a distractor stimulus to learn a cue–reward relation. While 8-month-olds showed evidence of increasingly selective attention toward the predictive cues, even when the distractors were highly salient, 6-month-olds shifted attention toward the predictive cues only when the distractors were equally (not more) engaging. These experiments suggest that attention in infancy is highly dependent on the relative weightings of predictiveness and visual salience, which may differ across development and context.


Fundación Dialnet

Dialnet Plus

  • Más información sobre Dialnet Plus