Gaze Following Is Accelerated in Healthy Preterm Infants

Pena M.; Arias, D; Dehaene-Lambertz, G

Keywords: experience, premature, emotion, facial expression, gaze following, social ability

Abstract

Gaze following is an essential human communication cue that orients the attention of two interacting people to the same external object. This capability is robustly observed after 7 months of age in full-term infants. Do healthy preterm infants benefit from their early exposure to face-to-face interactions with other humans to acquire this capacity sooner than full-term infants of the same chronological age, despite their immature brains? In two different experiments, we demonstrated that 7-month-old preterm infants performed like 7-month-old full-term infants (with whom they shared the same chronological age) and not like 4-month-old full-term infants (with whom they shared the same postmenstrual age). The duration of exposure to visual experience thus appears to have a greater impact on the development of early gaze following than does postmenstrual age.

Más información

Título según WOS: Gaze Following Is Accelerated in Healthy Preterm Infants
Título según SCOPUS: Gaze Following Is Accelerated in Healthy Preterm Infants
Título de la Revista: PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volumen: 25
Número: 10
Editorial: SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Página de inicio: 1884
Página final: 1892
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1177/0956797614544307

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS