habituation
The decrease in the
response to a stimulus that occurs after
repeated presentations of the same
stimulus.
FIGURE 2
This newborn infant is clearly
imitating the expressions of the adult
model in these amazing photos. How
does this ability contribute to social
development?
(Source: Courtesy of
Dr. Tiff any Field.)
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396 Chapter
12
Development
near or far objects. By the age of 4 or 5 months, they are able to recognize two- and
three-dimensional objects, and they can perceive the gestalt organizing principles
discovered by psychologists who study perception. By the age of 7 months, neural
systems related to the processing of information about facial expressions are highly
sophisticated and cause babies to respond differently to specifi c facial expressions
(see Figure 3). Overall, their perceptual abilities rapidly improve: Sensitivity to visual
stimuli, for instance, becomes three to four times greater at 1 year of age than it was
at birth (Johnson, 2004; Striano & Vaish, 2006; Leppanen et al., 2007).
In addition to vision, infants display other impressive sensory capabilities.
Newborns can distinguish different sounds to the point of being able to recognize
their own mothers’ voices at the age of 3 days. They can also make the subtle
perceptual distinctions that underlie language abilities. For example, at 2 days of
Neuroscience in Your Life:
Young Infants
Recognize Emotions Early in Life
FIGURE 3
Using a method that measures electrophysiological responses in the brain
(event-related potentials), researchers have found that by 7 months of age infants show
distinct responses to happy, fearful, and neutral facial expressions using diff erent regions
of their brain (specifi cally, the medial, semimedial, and lateral regions). For example,
approximately 400 milliseconds after seeing a fearful face (see arrow), infants show greater
brain activity than when seeing either a neutral or happy face. This demonstrates that infants
recognize diff erences between these facial expressions.
(Source: Leppanen et al., 2007, Figure 2.)
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Left lateral
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Left medial
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“N 290”
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Fearful
Happy
Neutral
Right lateral
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