DocumentCode :
48490
Title :
Mothers’ Infant-Directed Gaze During Object Demonstration Highlights Action Boundaries and Goals
Author :
Brand, R.J. ; Hollenbeck, E. ; Kominsky, J.F.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Psychol., Villanova Univ., Villanova, PA, USA
Volume :
5
Issue :
3
fYear :
2013
fDate :
Sept. 2013
Firstpage :
192
Lastpage :
201
Abstract :
When demonstrating objects to young children, parents use specialized action features, called “motionese,” which elicit attention and facilitate imitation. We hypothesized that the timing of mothers´ infant-directed eye gaze in such interactions may provide systematic cues to the structure of action. We asked 35 mothers to demonstrate a series of tasks on objects to their 7- and 12-mo-old infants, with three objects affording enabling sequences leading to a salient goal, and three objects affording arbitrary sequences with no goal. We found that mothers´ infant-directed gaze was more aligned with action boundary points than expected by chance, and was particularly tightly aligned with the final actions of enabling sequences. For 7- but not 12-mo-olds, mothers spent more time with arbitrary than enabling-sequence objects, and provided especially tight alignment for action initiations relative to completions. These findings suggest that infants may be privy to patterns of information in mothers´ gaze which signal action boundaries and particularly highlight action goals, and that these patterns shift based on the age or knowledge state of the learner.
Keywords :
cognition; paediatrics; action boundary points; action features; mothers infant-directed eye gaze; motionese; object demonstration; Electron tubes; Encoding; Pressing; Reliability; Speech; Timing; Trajectory; Eye gaze; infant-directed action; motionese; statistical learning;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Autonomous Mental Development, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1943-0604
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TAMD.2013.2273057
Filename :
6563096
Link To Document :
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