Infants' perception of the direction and speed of motion could be mediated by several underlying mechanisms, including sensitivity to temporal variations in luminance, the relative position of pattern elements, or time-locked spatial displacements. Velocity thresholds were estimated in 6- and 12-week-old infants who viewed a set of moving stripes surrounded by sets of stationary stripes. The forced-choice preferential looking technique was used to collect data from infants who were presented with high-contrast stripes of 2 widths moving at several different velocities. Velocity thresholds were approximately 9°/s in the 6-week-olds and 4°/s in the 12-week-olds. Thresholds did not vary with stripe width at either age, suggesting that motion perception in young infants is not based on a simple flicker-sensitive mechanism. Rather, infant velocity thresholds are based either on a position-sensitive or a motion-sensitive mechanism, at least for high-contrast spatial patterns.