Visual completion of partly occluded grating in infants under 1 month of age

被引:17
作者
Kawabata, H [1 ]
Gyoba, J
Inoue, H
Ohtsubo, H
机构
[1] Kyushu Univ, Fac Letters, Dept Psychol, Higashi Ku, Fukuoka 8128521, Japan
[2] Tohoku Univ, Fac Arts & Letters, Dept Psychol, Aoba Ku, Sendai, Miyagi 9808576, Japan
[3] Kagoshima Univ, Fac Educ, Dept Psychol, Kagoshima 8900065, Japan
关键词
infant vision; visual completion; grating;
D O I
10.1016/S0042-6989(99)00060-7
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Four groups of eight infants (3 weeks of age on average) were each habituated to one of four displays consisting of a grating of either low (0.4 cpd) or high (1.2 cpd) spatial frequency, whose central portion was covered up with a horizontal occluder which was either narrow (1.33 degrees) or broad (4.17 degrees). These habituation displays are referred to as LN (low spatial frequency grating and narrow occluder), LB (low and broad), HN thigh and narrow), and I-IB thigh and broad) displays. Posthabituation-test displays consisted of a complete grating (CG) of the same frequency as the habituated grating along with a separate grating (SG) whose central portion was replaced with a black gap of the same height as the occluder in the habituation displays. Infants habituated to the LN display looked significantly longer at the SG than the CG display during posthabituation-test trials. Infants habituated to the LB and HN displays looked at the CG and SG displays, almost equally. In contrast, infants habituated to the HE display looked longer at the CG than the SG display. These results show that infants under 1 month of age can perceive the continuation of the grating behind the occluder, and that their visual completion on habituation displays can be evoked according to the interaction between the spatial frequency of the grating and the occluder height. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:3586 / 3591
页数:6
相关论文
共 21 条
[1]   SYSTEMATIC MEASUREMENT OF HUMAN NEONATAL COLOR-VISION [J].
ADAMS, RJ ;
COURAGE, ML ;
MERCER, ME .
VISION RESEARCH, 1994, 34 (13) :1691-1701
[2]   CONFLICTING FIGURE - GROUND AND DEPTH INFORMATION REDUCES MOVING PHANTOM VISIBILITY [J].
BROWN, JM ;
WEISSTEIN, N .
PERCEPTION, 1991, 20 (02) :155-165
[3]   STATIONARY PHANTOMS - A COMPLETION EFFECT WITHOUT MOTION AND FLICKER [J].
GYOBA, J .
VISION RESEARCH, 1983, 23 (02) :205-+
[4]   INFANT-CONTROL PROCEDURE FOR STUDYING INFANT VISUAL FIXATIONS [J].
HOROWITZ, FD ;
PADEN, L ;
BHANA, K ;
SELF, P .
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1972, 7 (01) :90-90
[5]   YOUNG INFANTS PERCEPTION OF OBJECT UNITY IN 2-DIMENSIONAL DISPLAYS [J].
JOHNSON, SP ;
NANEZ, JE .
INFANT BEHAVIOR & DEVELOPMENT, 1995, 18 (02) :133-143
[6]   Young infants' perception of object unity: Implications for development of attentional and cognitive skills [J].
Johnson, SP .
CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 1997, 6 (01) :5-11
[7]   Perception of object unity in young infants: The roles of motion, depth, and orientation [J].
Johnson, SP ;
Aslin, RN .
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT, 1996, 11 (02) :161-180
[8]   PERCEPTION OF OBJECT UNITY IN 2-MONTH-OLD INFANTS [J].
JOHNSON, SP ;
ASLIN, RN .
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1995, 31 (05) :739-745
[9]   INFANT PERCEPTION OF OBJECT UNITY FROM TRANSLATORY MOTION IN DEPTH AND VERTICAL TRANSLATION [J].
KELLMAN, PJ ;
SPELKE, ES ;
SHORT, KR .
CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1986, 57 (01) :72-86
[10]   PERCEPTION OF PARTLY OCCLUDED OBJECTS IN INFANCY [J].
KELLMAN, PJ ;
SPELKE, ES .
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 1983, 15 (04) :483-524