Infants fine-tune their visual and auditory systems to stimuli during the first year of life, essentially “weeding out” unnecessary discriminatory abilities.
Psychologists at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst have found that infants fine-tune their visual and auditory systems to stimuli during the first year of life, essentially “weeding out” unnecessary discriminatory abilities.
Lisa Scott and her colleagues examined several studies suggesting that infants begin to hone their perceptual discrimination to environmentally relevant distinctions as they become nine to 12 months of age.In one study, six-month-old infants were able to differentiate between two human faces as easily as between two monkey faces, whereas nine-month-olds could only differentiate between two human faces.
The study also showed that infants maintained the ability to tell the difference between two monkey faces if they were familiarized with monkey faces when they were six to nine months old.
This phenomenon, called “perceptual narrowing” also occurs in other perceptual systems, say the researchers.
In another study examining speech, six-month-old infants could discriminate one sound from another from virtually every language, but the ability declined by the ninth month if they did not receive any experience with such sounds.
“What is most intriguing about these findings is that they collectively suggest that typical perceptual specialization and development is characterized by the gradual decline of abilities, not just gaining new ones,” said Scott.
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“It is important to note that this does not suggest a developmental regression, but progression towards greater efficiency at perceiving and processing salient rather than less-salient environmental input,” write the authors.
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Source-ANI
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