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The hollow-face illusion in infancy: do infants see a screen based rotating hollow mask as hollow?

We investigated whether infants experience the hollow-face illusion using a screen-based presentation of a rotating hollow mask. In experiment 1 we examined preferential looking between rotating convex and concave faces. Adults looked more at the concave—illusory convex—face which appears to counter...

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Autores principales: Tsuruhara, Aki, Nakato, Emi, Otsuka, Yumiko, Kanazawa, So, Yamaguchi, Masami K, Hill, Harold
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pion 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3485784/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23145235
http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/i0423
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author Tsuruhara, Aki
Nakato, Emi
Otsuka, Yumiko
Kanazawa, So
Yamaguchi, Masami K
Hill, Harold
author_facet Tsuruhara, Aki
Nakato, Emi
Otsuka, Yumiko
Kanazawa, So
Yamaguchi, Masami K
Hill, Harold
author_sort Tsuruhara, Aki
collection PubMed
description We investigated whether infants experience the hollow-face illusion using a screen-based presentation of a rotating hollow mask. In experiment 1 we examined preferential looking between rotating convex and concave faces. Adults looked more at the concave—illusory convex—face which appears to counter rotate. Infants of 7- to 8-month-old infants preferred the convex face, and 5- to 6-month-olds showed no preference. While older infants discriminate, their preference differed from that of adults possibly because they don't experience the illusion or counter rotation. In experiment 2 we tested preference in 7- to 8-month-olds for angled convex and concave static faces both before and after habituation to the stimuli shown in experiment 1. The infants showed a novelty preference for the static shape opposite to the habituation stimulus, together with a general preference for the static convex face. This shows that they discriminate between convex and concave faces and that habituation to either transfers across a change in view. Seven- to eight-month-olds have been shown to discriminate direction of rigid rotation on the basis of perspective changes. Our results suggest that this, perhaps together with a weaker bias to perceive faces as convex, allows these infants to see the screen-based hollow face as hollow even though adults perceive it as convex.
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spelling pubmed-34857842012-11-09 The hollow-face illusion in infancy: do infants see a screen based rotating hollow mask as hollow? Tsuruhara, Aki Nakato, Emi Otsuka, Yumiko Kanazawa, So Yamaguchi, Masami K Hill, Harold Iperception Research Article We investigated whether infants experience the hollow-face illusion using a screen-based presentation of a rotating hollow mask. In experiment 1 we examined preferential looking between rotating convex and concave faces. Adults looked more at the concave—illusory convex—face which appears to counter rotate. Infants of 7- to 8-month-old infants preferred the convex face, and 5- to 6-month-olds showed no preference. While older infants discriminate, their preference differed from that of adults possibly because they don't experience the illusion or counter rotation. In experiment 2 we tested preference in 7- to 8-month-olds for angled convex and concave static faces both before and after habituation to the stimuli shown in experiment 1. The infants showed a novelty preference for the static shape opposite to the habituation stimulus, together with a general preference for the static convex face. This shows that they discriminate between convex and concave faces and that habituation to either transfers across a change in view. Seven- to eight-month-olds have been shown to discriminate direction of rigid rotation on the basis of perspective changes. Our results suggest that this, perhaps together with a weaker bias to perceive faces as convex, allows these infants to see the screen-based hollow face as hollow even though adults perceive it as convex. Pion 2011-07-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3485784/ /pubmed/23145235 http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/i0423 Text en Copyright © 2011 A Tsuruhara, E Nakato, Y Otsuka, S Kanazawa, M K Yamaguchi, H Hill http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This open-access article is distributed under a Creative Commons Licence, which permits noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction, provided the original author(s) and source are credited and no alterations are made.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tsuruhara, Aki
Nakato, Emi
Otsuka, Yumiko
Kanazawa, So
Yamaguchi, Masami K
Hill, Harold
The hollow-face illusion in infancy: do infants see a screen based rotating hollow mask as hollow?
title The hollow-face illusion in infancy: do infants see a screen based rotating hollow mask as hollow?
title_full The hollow-face illusion in infancy: do infants see a screen based rotating hollow mask as hollow?
title_fullStr The hollow-face illusion in infancy: do infants see a screen based rotating hollow mask as hollow?
title_full_unstemmed The hollow-face illusion in infancy: do infants see a screen based rotating hollow mask as hollow?
title_short The hollow-face illusion in infancy: do infants see a screen based rotating hollow mask as hollow?
title_sort hollow-face illusion in infancy: do infants see a screen based rotating hollow mask as hollow?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3485784/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23145235
http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/i0423
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