65 results on '"Valenza, E"'
Search Results
2. Is Weibull’s modulus really a material constant? Example case with interacting collinear cracks
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Afferrante, L., Ciavarella, M., and Valenza, E.
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- 2006
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3. The attentional 'Zoom-Lens' in eight-month-old infants
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Ronconi, Luca, Franchin, Laura, Valenza, E., Gori, S., Facoetti, A., Ronconi, Luca, Franchin, Laura, Valenza, E., Gori, S., and Facoetti, A.
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zoom-lens model ,joint attention ,visual attention ,visual perception ,attentional scaling - Abstract
The spatial attention mechanisms of orienting and zooming cooperate to properly select visual information from the environment and plan eye movements accordingly. Despite the fact that orienting ability has been extensively studied in infancy, the zooming mechanism—namely, the ability to distribute the attentional resources to a small or large portion of the visual field—has never been tested before. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the attentional zooming abilities in eight-month-old infants. An eye-tracker device was employed to measure the saccadic latencies (SLs) at the onset of a visual target displayed at two eccentricities. The size of the more eccentric target was adjusted in order to counteract the effect of cortical magnification. Before the target display, attentional resources were automatically focused (zoom-in) or spread out (zoom-out) by using a small or large cue, respectively. Two different cue-target intervals were also employed to measure the time course of this attentional mechanism. The results showed that infants’ SLs varied as a function of the cue size. Moreover, a clear time course emerged, demonstrating that infants can rapidly adjust the attentional focus size during a pre-saccadic temporal window. These findings could serve as an early marker for neurodevelopmental disorders associated with attentional zooming dysfunction such as autism and dyslexia.
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- 2016
4. Many faces, a single rule
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Bulf, H., Brenna, V., Johnson, S. P., Valenza, E, and Turati, C.
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- 2017
5. How a hat may affect 3-month-olds’ recognition of a face
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TURATI, CHIARA, BULF, HERMANN SERGIO, Valenza, E., Turati, C, Bulf, H, and Valenza, E
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paraphernalia ,infant ,face recognition ,eye-tracker - Published
- 2013
6. Three-month-old infants’ representation of a face: How is it vulnerable to the effect of an extraneous add-on element - a hat?
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BULF, HERMANN SERGIO, TURATI, CHIARA, Valenza, E, Bulf, H, Valenza, E, and Turati, C
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paraphernalia ,infant ,face recognition ,eye-tracker - Published
- 2012
7. Do faces attract young infants’ attention? Examination of attentional shift behavior in 4-month-old infants
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Otsuka, Y, Ichikawa, H, Yamashita, W, Kanazawa, S, Valenza, E, Yamaguchi, MK, BULF, HERMANN SERGIO, Otsuka, Y, Ichikawa, H, Yamashita, W, Kanazawa, S, Bulf, H, Valenza, E, and Yamaguchi, M
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face detection ,visual attention ,infant ,eye-tracker - Published
- 2012
8. Object-based attention in infancy: an empirical comparison between physical and social objects
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Valenza, E, Franchin, L., BULF, HERMANN SERGIO, Valenza, E, Bulf, H, and Franchin, L
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Object-based attention ,infant ,eye-tracker - Published
- 2011
9. Newborns’ perception of left-right spatial relationship
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Gava, L, Valenza, E, TURATI, CHIARA, Gava, L, Valenza, E, and Turati, C
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M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Spatial relation ,M-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALE ,perceptual invariance ,infant - Published
- 2009
10. Newborns’ preference and recognition of partly-occluded faces
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Gava, L, Valenza, E, TURATI, CHIARA, de Schonen, S., Gava, L, Valenza, E, Turati, C, and de Schonen, S
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M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,newborns, face processing - Published
- 2005
11. Newborns'Preference and Recognition of Partly-Occluded Faces
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Gava, L., Valenza, E., Turati, C., De Schonen, S., Laboratoire psychologie de la perception (LPP), and Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5) - Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris (ENS Paris) - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
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Visual percertion ,masking ,neonates ,face recognition - Published
- 2008
12. P163 A comparison of the dietary regimen between pediatric patients with Celiac disease and the healthy pediatric subjects.
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Bavastrelli, L., Piciocchi, C., Valenza, E., Maimone, C., Palocci, G., and Caivano, L.
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- 2018
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13. The unique role of novel linguistic labels on the disengagement of visual attention
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Sofia Russo, Eloisa Valenza, Francesco Vespignani, Simone Sulpizio, Giulia Calignano, Calignano, G, Valenza, E, Vespignani, F, Russo, S, and Sulpizio, S
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genetic structures ,Physiology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,pupil dilation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physiology (medical) ,Attentional disengagement ,Saccades ,Pupillary response ,Humans ,Visual attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Privileged access ,novel label ,novel object ,saccade latency ,Disengagement theory ,General Psychology ,05 social sciences ,Novel object ,Linguistics ,General Medicine ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Do novel linguistic labels have privileged access to attentional resources compared to non-linguistic labels? This study explores this possibility through two experiments with a training and an attentional overlap task. Experiment 1 investigates how novel label and object-only stimuli influence resource allocation and disengagement of visual attention. Experiment 2 tests the impact of linguistic information on visual attention by comparing novel tones and labels. Because disengagement of attention is affected both by the salience of the perceptual stimulus and by the degree of familiarity with the stimulus to be disengaged from, we compared pupil size variations and saccade latency under different test conditions: (a) consistent with (i.e., identical to) the training; (b) inconsistent with the training (i.e., with an altered feature), and (c) deprived of one feature only in Experiment 1. Experiment 1 indicated a general consistency advantage (and deprived disadvantage) driven by linguistic label-object pairs compared to object-only stimuli. Experiment 2 revealed that tone-object pairs led to higher pupil dilation and longer saccade latency than linguistic label-object pairs. Our results suggest that novel linguistic labels preferentially impact the early orienting of attention.
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- 2021
14. 6 months versus 12 months of adjuvant trastuzumab in early breast cancer (PHARE): final analysis of a multicentre, open-label, phase 3 randomised trial
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Pivot, Xavier, Romieu, Gilles, Debled, Marc, Pierga, Jean-Yves, Kerbrat, Pierre, Bachelot, Thomas, Lortholary, Alain, Espié, Marc, Fumoleau, Pierre, Serin, Daniel, Jacquin, Jean-Philippe, Jouannaud, Christelle, Rios, Maria, Abadie-Lacourtoisie, Sophie, Venat-Bouvet, Laurence, Cany, Laurent, Catala, Stéphanie, Khayat, David, Gambotti, Laetitia, Pauporté, Iris, Faure-Mercier, Céline, Paget-Bailly, Sophie, Henriques, Julie, Grouin, Jean Marie, Centre Paul Strauss, CRLCC Paul Strauss, CRLCC Val d'Aurelle - Paul Lamarque, Institut Bergonié [Bordeaux], UNICANCER, Institut Curie [Paris], Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5), CRLCC Eugène Marquis (CRLCC), Centre Léon Bérard [Lyon], Centre Catherine-de-Sienne [Nantes] (CCS), Hopital Saint-Louis [AP-HP] (AP-HP), Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP), Institut Sainte Catherine [Avignon], Institut de Cancérologie Lucien Neuwirth, CHU Saint-Etienne, CRLCC Jean Godinot, Institut Jean Godinot [Reims], Institut de Cancérologie de Lorraine - Alexis Vautrin [Nancy] (UNICANCER/ICL), Institut de Cancérologie de l'Ouest [Angers/Nantes] (UNICANCER/ICO), CHU Limoges, Clinique Francheville [Périgueux], CHU Saint-Pierre, Clinique Bizet [Pais], Institut national du cancer [Boulogne] (INCA), Ligue Nationale Contre le Cancer - Paris, Ligue Nationale Contre le Cancer (LNCC), Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Besançon (CHRU Besançon), Unité de biostatistiques [CHU Rouen], CHU Rouen, Normandie Université (NU)-Normandie Université (NU)-Université de Rouen Normandie (UNIROUEN), Normandie Université (NU), The French National Cancer Institute, PHARE trial investigators: C Piprot, L Cals, L Chaigneau, F Demarchi, T N'Guyen, U Stein, C Villanueva, J L Bréau, A K Chouahnia, P Saintigny, F Boué, P deSaint-Hilaire, I Guimont, N Grossat, B Valenza, E Lévy, J Médioni, C Delbaldo, J Grenier, D Pouessel, S Lavau-Denès, C Falandry, C Fournel-Fédérico, G Freyer, S Tartas, V Trillet-Lenoir, F Bons, G Auclerc, S Chièze, N Raban, C Tournigand, S Trager-Maury, G Bousquet, C Cuvier, S Giacchetti, A Hocini, C LeMaignan, J L Misset, D Avenin, C Beerblock, J Gligorov, P Rivera, H Roché, P Bougnoux, N Hajjaji, O Capitain, R Delva, P Maillart, P Soulié, H Bonnefoi, M Durand, N Madranges, L Mauriac, P Chollet, A F Dillies, X Durando, J P Ferrière, C Mouret-Reynier, J M Nabholtz, I Van Praagh, P Cottu, V Diéras, A Durieux, M Galotte, V Girre, S Henry, I Iurisci, M Jouve, V Laurence, L Mignot, S Piperno-Neumann, P Tresca, B Coudert, E Ferrant, F Mayer, A C Vanneuville, J Bonneterre, V Servent, L Vanlemmens, P Vennin, J P Guastalla, P Biron, L Dupuy-Brousseau, L Lancry, I Ray-Coquard, P Rebattu, O Trédan, J M Extra, F Rousseau, C Tarpin, M Fabbro, E Luporsi, L Uwer, B Weber, D Berton-Rigaud, E Bourbouloux, M Campone, J M Ferrero, P Follana, R Largillier, V Mari, B Costa, H Curé, J C Eymard, N Jovenin, D Lebrun, J Meunier, G Yazbek, D Gedoin, B Laguerre, C Lefeuvre, E Vauléon, A Chevrier, C Guillemet, M Leheurteur, O Rigal, I Tennevet, C Veyret, E Brain, M Guiterrez, F Mefti-Lacheraf, T Petit, F Dalenc, L Gladieff, H Roché, F André, S Delaloge, J Domont, J Ezenfis, M Spielmann, P Guillet, V Boulanger, J Provençal, L Stefani, C Alliot, D Ré, C Bellaiche-Miccio, G Boutan-Laroze, R Vanica, P Dion, A Hocini, G Sadki-Benaoudia, A Marti, A L Villing, B Slama, J L Dutel, S Nguyen, R Saad, O Arsène, Z Merad-Boudia, H Orfeuvre, J Egreteau, M J Goudier, R Lamy, B Leduc, C Sarda, B Salles, C Agostini, I Cauvin, A Dufresne, M Mangold, S Lebouvier-Sadot, B Audhuy, J C Barats, S Cluet-Dennetière, D Zylberait, G Netter, L Gautier-Felizot, I Cojean-Zelek, A Plantade, S Vignot, E Guardiola, P Marti, I deHartingh, R Diab, A Dietmann, S Ruck, C Portois, E Guardiola, S Oddou-Lagranière, F Campos-Gazeau, A Bourcier, F Priou, J F Geay, D Mayeur, P Gabez, R ElAmarti, M Combe, J Ezenfis, P Raichon-Patru, P Amsalhem, J Dauba, D Paraiso, F Guinet, B Duvert, M Litor, F Kara-Slimane, A Bichoffe, N Denizon, J Meunier, P Soyer, F Morvan, S Van-Hulst, L Vincent, C Alleaume, P Ibanez-Martin, A Youssef, Z Tadrist, E Carola, C Pourny, J F Toccanier, N Al-Aukla, K Mahour-Bacha, J Salvat, L Cals, P Nouyrigat, S Clippe, M C Gouttebel, L Vedrine, G Clavreul, O Collard, D Mille, Y Goubely, J Grenier, R Hervé, S Kirscher, F Plat, V Delecroix, V Ligeza-Poisson, D Coeffic, L Dupuy-Brousseau, D Fric, C Garnier, C Leyronnas, T Kreitman, R Largillier, E Teissier, P Martin, S Rohart deCordoue, C ElKouri, J F Ramée, C Laporte, O Bernard, T Altwegg, A Darut-Jouve, J P Dujols, F Darloy, C Giraud, V Pottier-Kyndt, N Achour, S Drony, M Moriceau, C Sarrazin, J C Legueul, J Mandet, D Besson, A C Hardy-Bessard, J Cretin, P Houyau, E Achille, D Genêt, H Thévenot, A Moran-Ribon, J M Pavlovitch, P Ardisson, I Moullet, B Couderc, V Fichet, F Burki, A Auliard, C B Levaché, G Auclerc, P Cailleux, F Schaeffer, N Albin, D Sévin-Robiche, J Domas, S Ellis, P Montcuquet, G A Baumont, M Bégue, S Gréget, J L Ratoanina, A Vanoli, C Bielsa, M Bonichon-Lamichhane, D Jaubert, H Laharie-Mineur, L Alcaraz, J Cretin, E Legouffe, H Bourgeois, G Cartron, F Denis, O Dupuis, G Ganem, S Roche-Forestier, L Delzenne, E Chirat, J L Baticle, E Béguier, S Jacquot, E Janssen, H Lauché, A LeRol, J P Chantelard, G A L'Helgoualc'h, E C Antoine, A Kanoui, J F Llory, J M Vannetzel, J Vignoud, C Bruna, T Facchini, K Moutel-Corviole, A Voloch, A Ghoul, D Loiseau, K Mahour-Bacha, N Barbet, N Dohollou, K Yakendji, CCSD, Accord Elsevier, and Ligue Nationnale Contre le Cancer
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[SDV.CAN] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Cancer ,[SDV.CAN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Cancer ,skin and connective tissue diseases - Abstract
International audience; Background: In 2013, the interim analysis of the Protocol for Herceptin as Adjuvant therapy with Reduced Exposure (PHARE) trial could not show that 6 months of adjuvant trastuzumab was non-inferior to 12 months. Here, we report the planned final analysis based on the prespecified number of occurring events.Methods: PHARE is an open-label, phase 3, non-inferiority randomised trial of patients with HER2-positive early breast cancer comparing 6 months versus 12 months of trastuzumab treatment concomitant with or following standard neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy. The study was undertaken in 156 centres in France. Eligible patients were women aged 18 years or older with non-metastatic, operable, histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the breast and either positive axillary nodes or negative axillary nodes but a tumour of at least 10 mm. Participants must have received at least four cycles of a chemotherapy for this breast cancer and have started receiving adjuvant trastuzumab-treatment. Eligible patients were randomly assigned to either 6 months or 12 months of trastuzumab therapy duration between the third and sixth months of adjuvant trastuzumab. The randomisation was stratified by concomitant or sequential treatment with chemotherapy, oestrogen receptor status, and centre. The primary objective was non-inferiority in the intention-to-treat population in the 6-month group in terms of disease-free survival with a prespecified hazard margin of 1·15. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00381901.Findings: 3384 patients were enrolled and randomly assigned to either 12 months (n=1691) or 6 months (n=1693) of adjuvant trastuzumab. One patient in the 12-month group and three patients in the 6-month group were excluded, so 1690 patients in each group were included in the intention-to-treat analysis. At a median follow-up of 7·5 years (IQR 5·3-8·8), 704 events relevant to disease-free survival were observed (345 [20·4%] in the 12-month group and 359 [21·2%] in the 6-month group). The adjusted hazard ratio for disease-free survival in the 12-month group versus the 6-month group was 1·08 (95% CI 0·93-1·25; p=0·39). The non-inferiority margin was included in the 95% CI. No differences in effects pertaining to trastuzumab duration were found in any of the subgroups. After the completion of trastuzumab treatment, rare adverse events occurred over time and the safety analysis remained similar to the previously published report. In particular, we found no change in the cardiac safety comparison, and only three additional cases in which the left ventricular ejection fraction decreased to less than 50% have been reported in the 12-month group.Interpretation: The PHARE study did not show the non-inferiority of 6 months versus 12 months of adjuvant trastuzumab. Hence, adjuvant trastuzumab standard duration should remain 12 months.
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- 2019
15. Pain memory in full-term newborns
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Barba, B.Dalla, Gatto, C., Valenza, E., Calabro, L., Cavedagni, M., Prandoni, S., and Benini, F.
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- 1991
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16. Face Orientation and Motion Differently Affect the Deployment of Visual Attention in Newborns and 4-Month-Old Infants
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Hiroko Ichikawa, So Kanazawa, Masami K. Yamaguchi, Yumiko Otsuka, Hermann Bulf, Eloisa Valenza, Valenza, E, Otsuka, Y, Bulf, H, Ichikawa, H, Kanazawa, S, and Yamaguchi, M
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,newborns ,Motion Perception ,lcsh:Medicine ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Audiology ,Child Development ,motion ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Motion perception ,visual attention, eye-tracker, face, motion, infants, newborns ,lcsh:Science ,Visual search ,Multidisciplinary ,infants ,lcsh:R ,Infant, Newborn ,face ,Eye movement ,Child development ,eye-tracker ,visual attention ,Software deployment ,Eye tracking ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,Psychology ,N2pc ,Facial Recognition ,Research Article - Abstract
Orienting visual attention allows us to properly select relevant visual information from a noisy environment. Despite extensive investigation of the orienting of visual attention in infancy, it is unknown whether and how stimulus characteristics modulate the deployment of attention from birth to 4 months of age, a period in which the efficiency in orienting of attention improves dramatically. The aim of the present study was to compare 4-month-old infants’ and newborns’ ability to orient attention from central to peripheral stimuli that have the same or different attributes. In Experiment 1, all the stimuli were dynamic and the only attribute of the central and peripheral stimuli to be manipulated was face orientation. In Experiment 2, both face orientation and motion of the central and peripheral stimuli were contrasted. The number of valid trials and saccadic latency were measured at both ages. Our results demonstrated that the deployment of attention is mainly influenced by motion at birth, while it is also influenced by face orientation at 4-month of age. These findings provide insight into the development of the orienting visual attention in the first few months of life and suggest that maturation may be not the only factor that determines the developmental change in orienting visual attention from birth to 4 months.
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- 2015
17. How a face may affect object-based attention: evidence from adults and 8-month-old infants
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Hermann Bulf, Laura Franchin, Eloisa Valenza, Valenza, E, Franchin, L, and Bulf, H
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genetic structures ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Stimulus (physiology) ,eye tracker ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,Developmental psychology ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Perception ,Face processing ,Visual attention ,Original Research Article ,infancy ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,object-based attention, visual attention, faces, eye-tracker, infancy ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Object-based attention ,media_common ,Cued speech ,object-based attention ,Sensory Systems ,Saccadic masking ,eye-tracker ,visual attention ,faces ,Eye tracking ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Object-based attention operates on perceptual objects, opening the possibility that the costs and benefits humans have to pay to move attention between-objects might be affected by the nature of the stimuli. The current study reported two experiments with adults and 8-month-old infants investigating whether object-based-attention is affected by the type of stimulus (faces vs. non-faces stimuli). Using the well-known cueing task developed by Egly et al. (1994) to study the object-based component of attention, in Experiment 1 adult participants were presented with two upright, inverted or scrambled faces and an eye-tracker measured their saccadic latencies to find a target that could appear on the same object that was just cued or on the other object that was uncued. Data showed that an object-based effect (a smaller cost to shift attention within- compared to between-objects) occurred only with scrambled face, but not with upright or inverted faces. In Experiment 2 the same task was performed with 8-month-old infants, using upright and inverted faces. Data revealed that an object-based effect emerges only for inverted faces but not for upright faces. Overall, these findings suggest that object-based attention is modulated by the type of stimulus and by the experience acquired by the viewer with different objects. © 2014 Valenza, Franchin and Bulf.
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- 2014
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18. Paternal autistic traits are predictive of infants visual attention
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Andrea Facoetti, Eloisa Valenza, Roberta Bettoni, Hermann Bulf, Luca Ronconi, Laura Franchin, Ronconi, L, Facoetti, A, Bulf, H, Franchin, L, Bettoni, R, Valenza, E, Ronconi, Luca, Facoetti, Andrea, Bulf, Hermann, Franchin, Laura, Bettoni, Roberta, and Valenza, Eloisa
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Male ,Spatial ability ,Population ,Broader autism phenotype ,Broader autism phenotype, Spatial attention, Temporal attention, Frontoparietal network, Right temporoparietal junction, Social brain development ,autism ,Attention span ,Developmental psychology ,Frontoparietal network ,Fathers ,Temporal attention ,Social cognition ,Orientation ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Social brain development ,Disengagement theory ,Autistic Disorder ,education ,Child ,Social Behavior ,Vision, Ocular ,education.field_of_study ,Communication ,Attentional control ,Infant ,Cognition ,Spatial attention ,Broader autism phenotype, Frontoparietal network, Right temporoparietal junction, Social brain development, Spatial attention, Temporal attention ,medicine.disease ,Right temporoparietal junction ,eye-tracker ,visual attention ,Autism ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
Since subthreshold autistic social impairments aggregate in family members, and since attentional dysfunctions appear to be one of the earliest cognitive markers of children with autism, we investigated in the general population the relationship between infants' attentional functioning and the autistic traits measured in their parents. Orienting and alerting attention systems were measured in 8-month-old infants using a spatial cueing paradigm. Results showed that only paternal autistic traits were linked to their children's: (1) attentional disengagement; (2) rapid attentional orienting and (3) alerting. Our findings suggest that an early dysfunction of orienting and alerting systems might alter the developmental trajectory of future ability in social cognition and communication. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media.
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- 2014
19. How a Hat May Affect 3-Month-Olds' Recognition of a Face: An Eye-Tracking Study
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Hermann Bulf, Eloisa Valenza, Chiara Turati, Bulf, H, Valenza, E, and Turati, C
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Male ,Visual perception ,Speech recognition ,lcsh:Medicine ,INFANTS ,Biology ,Facial recognition system ,050105 experimental psychology ,Memory ,Face processing ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Habituation ,lcsh:Science ,Facial expression ,Multidisciplinary ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:R ,Age Factors ,Infant ,Recognition, Psychology ,Facial Expression ,Face identity ,Face ,Visual Perception ,Eye tracking ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,Test phase ,face recognition, eye-tracker, infants ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Research Article - Abstract
Recent studies have shown that infants’ face recognition rests on a robust face representation that is resilient to a variety of facial transformations such as rotations in depth, motion, occlusion or deprivation of inner/outer features. Here, we investigated whether 3-month-old infants’ ability to represent the invariant aspects of a face is affected by the presence of an external add-on element, i.e. a hat. Using a visual habituation task, three experiments were carried out in which face recognition was investigated by manipulating the presence/absence of a hat during face encoding (i.e. habituation phase) and face recognition (i.e. test phase). An eye-tracker system was used to record the time infants spent looking at face-relevant information compared to the hat. The results showed that infants’ face recognition was not affected by the presence of the external element when the type of the hat did not vary between the habituation and test phases, and when both the novel and the familiar face wore the same hat during the test phase (Experiment 1). Infants’ ability to recognize the invariant aspects of a face was preserved also when the hat was absent in the habituation phase and the same hat was shown only during the test phase (Experiment 2). Conversely, when the novel face identity competed with a novel hat, the hat triggered the infants’ attention, interfering with the recognition process and preventing the infants’ preference for the novel face during the test phase (Experiment 3). Findings from the current study shed light on how faces and objects are processed when they are simultaneously presented in the same visual scene, contributing to an understanding of how infants respond to the multiple and composite information available in their surrounding environment.
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- 2013
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20. Object-based visual attention in 8-month-old infants: Evidence from an eye-tracking study
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Eloisa Valenza, Hermann Bulf, Bulf, H, and Valenza, E
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Adult ,Male ,Time Factors ,Visual perception ,Adolescent ,Eye Movements ,genetic structures ,INFANTS ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Gaze-contingency paradigm ,Child Development ,Visual Objects ,Reaction Time ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Attention ,Visual attention ,infancy ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Object-based attention ,Demography ,computer.programming_language ,Cued speech ,Age Factors ,Infant ,Eye movement ,object-based attention ,eye-tracker ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Space Perception ,Saccade ,Eye tracking ,Female ,Cues ,Psychology ,computer ,Photic Stimulation ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Visual attention is one of the infant's primary tools for gathering relevant information from the environment for further processing and learning. The space-based component of visual attention in infants has been widely investigated; however, the object-based component of visual attention has received scarce interest. This scarcity is surprising, given the importance of objects in driving infants' attention and predispositions to attend to object information. Here, we investigated the object-based component of attention in 8-month-old infants. An eye tracker measured the saccade latencies to find a target that could appear in a previously cued end of 2 bars (valid targets), in the other end of the cued bar (invalid same-object targets), or in the other bar but at the same distance from the cue (invalid different-object targets). Bars were unoccluded or partly occluded; if attention is object based, it should also operate on objects that require perceptual completion. After verifying in a sample of adults (Experiment 1) that a measure of saccade latency suitably assessed space-based and object-based attention, we tested 8-month-old infants (Experiment 2) using the same procedure. The results showed that in both adults and infants, target detection was faster for valid targets than for invalid ones (space-based effect). Moreover, for both the unoccluded and partly occluded conditions, detection was faster on invalid within-object trials than on invalid between-objects trials (object-based effect). These findings demonstrate that visual objects can operate as units of attention for infants by the age of 8 months, offering implications for cognitive development. © 2012 American Psychological Association.
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- 2013
21. Visual statistical learning in the newborn infant
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Scott P. Johnson, Eloisa Valenza, Hermann Bulf, Bulf, H, Johnson, S, and Valenza, E
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Linguistics and Language ,Visual perception ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,education ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Sensory system ,Language and Linguistics ,Developmental psychology ,Cognitive resource theory ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Attention ,Habituation ,Habituation, Psychophysiologic ,Newborns ,Mechanism (biology) ,Text segmentation ,Infant, Newborn ,Cognition ,Implicit learning ,Statistical learning ,newborns ,Visual Perception ,Cues ,Probability Learning ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Statistical learning – implicit learning of statistical regularities within sensory input – is a way of acquiring structure within continuous sensory environments. Statistics computation, initially shown to be involved in word segmentation, has been demonstrated to be a general mechanism that operates across domains, across time and space, and across species. Recently, statistical leaning has been reported to be present even at birth when newborns were tested with a speech stream. The aim of the present study was to extend this finding, by investigating whether newborns’ ability to extract statistics operates in multiple modalities, as found for older infants and adults. Using the habituation procedure, two experiments were carried out in which visual sequences were presented. Results demonstrate that statistical learning is a general mechanism that extracts statistics across domain since the onset of sensory experience. Intriguingly, present data reveal that newborn learner’s limited cognitive resources constrain the functioning of statistical learning, narrowing the range of what can be learned.
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- 2011
22. Early development of object unity: Newborn’s evidence for perceptual completion
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Valenza, Eloisa, Bulf, H., Valenza, E, and Bulf, H
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newborns ,Object knowledge ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,perceptual completion ,Perceptual completion ,Newborn - Abstract
The present study aimed to investigate whether perceptual completion is available at birth, in the absence of any visual experience. An extremely underspecified kinetic visual display composed of four spatially separated fragments arranged to give rise to an illusory rectangle that occluded a vertical rod (illusory condition) or rotated so as not to elicit perceptual grouping (control condition) was constructed. After newborns’ ability to detect the particular kind of rod-and-box display used in the present study had been probed (Experiment 1), they were habituated to the illusory rod-and-box display (Experiment 2), to the control display that did not contain illusory contours (Experiment 3), and to a standard real rod-and-box display akin to those used in previous infants’ studies (Experiment 4). Newborns perceived the rod as a connected unit either in the illusory condition (Experiment 2) or in the real condition (Experiment 4), as documented by a preference for a broken rod over a complete rod during the test phase, but not when the occluder was absent (Experiment 3). In all experiments newborns showed no preference between the two test stimuli (control condition), avoiding the possibility that newborns have a spontaneous preference for one test display over the other. Overall, the results of the present study provide evidence that the ability to achieve object unity (1)stems from intrinsic properties of the human perceptual system and (2) is operative from birth, given the right conditions.
- Published
- 2011
23. Lo sviluppo percettivo e motorio
- Author
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Valenza, Eloisa, Turati, C., Barone, L, Valenza, E, and Turati, C
- Subjects
M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Sviluppo percettivo ,sviluppo motorio - Published
- 2009
24. Congruency as a non-specific perceptual property contributing to newborns' face preference
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Francesca Simion, Eloisa Valenza, Viola Macchi Cassia, Irene Leo, Macchi Cassia, V, Valenza, E, Simion, F, and Leo, I
- Subjects
Male ,Visual perception ,Property (programming) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Social preferences ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,newborn ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Attention ,Cumulative effect ,media_common ,congruence ,Infant, Newborn ,Recognition, Psychology ,Cognition ,innate bias ,Preference ,face preference ,Facial Expression ,Face (geometry) ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Past research has shown that top-heaviness is a perceptual property that plays a crucial role in triggering newborns’ preference toward faces. The present study examined the contribution of a second configural property, congruency, to newborns’ face preference. Experiments 1 and 2 demonstrated that, when embedded in non-facelike stimuli, congruency induces a preference of the same strength of that induced by facedness. Experiments 3 and 4 demonstrated that the attentional biases toward facedness and congruency produce a cumulative effect on newborns’ visual preferences according to an additive model. These findings were extended by those of Experiment 5, showing that the additive model holds true when congruency is added to top-heaviness in non-facelike stimuli displaying more elements in the upper portion.
- Published
- 2008
25. How face specialization emerges in the first months of life
- Author
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Francesca Simion, Irene Leo, Beatrice Dalla Barba, Eloisa Valenza, Chiara Turati, Von Hofsten, C, Rosander, K, Simion, F, Leo, I, Turati, C, and Valenza, E
- Subjects
cognition ,Facial expression ,media_common.quotation_subject ,face ,Face (sociological concept) ,Development ,perception ,Facial recognition system ,Developmental psychology ,specialization ,Form perception ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Perception ,Specialization (functional) ,infancy ,Set (psychology) ,Face detection ,Psychology ,M-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALE ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The present chapter deals with the topic of the ontogeny and development of face processing in the first months of life and is organized into two sections concerning face detection and face recognition. The first section focuses on the mechanisms underlying infants' visual preference for faces. Evidence is reviewed supporting the contention that newborns' face preferences is due to a set of non-specific constraints that stem from the general characteristics of the human visuo-perceptual system, rather than to a representational bias for faces. It is shown that infants' response to faces becomes more and more tuned to the face category over the first 3 months of life, revealing a gradual progressive specialization of the face-processing system. The second section sought to determine the properties of face recognition at birth. In particular, a series of experiments are presented to examine whether the inner facial part is processed and encoded when newborns recognize a face, and what kind of information - featural or configural - newborns' face recognition rely on. Overall, results are consistent with the existence of general constraints present at birth that tune the system to become specialized for faces later during development.
- Published
- 2007
26. The role of kinetic information in newborn's perception of illusory contours
- Author
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Hermann Bulf, Eloisa Valenza, Valenza, E, and Bulf, H
- Subjects
genetic structures ,Kanizsa ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Motion Perception ,Field Dependence-Independence ,Stroboscopic effect ,Motion (physics) ,Discrimination Learning ,Motion ,Child Development ,Form perception ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychophysics ,Illusory contours ,Humans ,Motion perception ,media_common ,Illusory contour ,Optical illusion ,Optical Illusions ,Visual perception ,Infant, Newborn ,Newborn ,Form Perception ,Kinetics ,Perceptual completion ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Previous research, in which static figures were used, showed that the ability to perceive illusory contours emerges around 7 months of age. However, recently, evidence has suggested that 2–3-month-old infants are able to perceive illusory contours when motion information is available (Johnson & Mason, 2002; Otsuka & Yamaguchi, 2003). The present study was aimed at investigating whether even newborns might perceive kinetic illusory contours when a motion easily detected by the immature newborn’s visual system (i.e. stroboscopic motion) is used. In Experiment 1, using a preference looking technique, newborns’ perception of kinetic illusory contours was explored using a Kanizsa figure in a static and in a kinetic display. The results showed that newborns manifest a preference for the illusory contours only in the kinetic, but not in the static, condition. In Experiment 2, using an habituation technique, newborns were habituated to a moving shape that was matched with the background in terms of random-texture-surface; thus the recovery of the shape was possible relying only on kinetic information. The results showed that infants manifested a novelty preference when presented with luminance-defined familiar and novel shapes. Altogether these findings provide evidence that motion enhances (Experiment 1) and sometimes is sufficient (Experiment 2) to induce newborns’ perception of illusory contours.
- Published
- 2007
27. Non-specific perceptual biases at the origins of face processing
- Author
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Simion, Francesca, MACCHI CASSIA, V., Turati, Chiara, Valenza, Eloisa, Pascalis, O, Slater, A, Simion, F, MACCHI CASSIA, V, Turati, C, and Valenza, E
- Subjects
preferenza, volto, neonato - Published
- 2003
28. Newborns'preference for up-down asymmetrical configurations
- Author
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Chiara Turati, Viola Macchi Cassia, Carlo Umiltà, Eloisa Valenza, Francesca Simion, Simion, F, Valenza, E, MACCHI CASSIA, V, Turati, C, and Umiltà, C
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual perception ,genetic structures ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Sensory system ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Audiology ,newborn, visual preference, structural properties ,Developmental psychology ,Visual field ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Infant development ,Psychology - Abstract
The present study was aimed at investigating whether, because of a differential sensitivity between the upper and the lower visual fields, in a visual preference task newborns would orient more frequently and look longer at patterns with a great number of high–contrast areas in the upper or lower visual field. Newborns were presented with three pairs of geometrical stimuli, each composed of a pattern with a greater number of elements in the upper part or a pattern with more elements in the lower part. The results showed a reliable preference for the stimuli that had more elements in the upper than in the lower part. The evidence obtained suggests the possibility that, at birth, the visibility of a stimulus depends not only on its sensory properties, but also on its structural characteristics.
- Published
- 2002
29. The modulating effect of gestational age on attentional disengagement in toddlers.
- Author
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Bovo M, Moyano S, Calignano G, Valenza E, Ballesteros-Duperon MÁ, and Rueda MR
- Abstract
Gestational Age (GA) at birth plays a crucial role in identifying potential vulnerabilities to long-term difficulties in cognitive and behavioral development. The present study aims to explore the influence of gestational age on the efficiency of early visual attention orienting, as a potential marker for the development of specific high-level socio-cognitive skills. We administered the Gap-Overlap task to measure the attentional orienting and disengagement performance of 16-month-olds born between the 34th and 41st weeks of gestation. Our findings indicate that GA might be a significant predictor of attentional disengagement performance, with lower GAs associated with slower orienting of visual attention in the gap condition. Additionally, we discuss a possible influence of endogenous attention control on disengagement accuracy at this age, particularly among full-term infants. Overall, the findings highlight the role of GA as a key factor in evaluating early visual attention development, acting as a marker for detecting early vulnerabilities., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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30. Infants' reorienting efficiency depends on parental autistic traits and predicts future socio-communicative behaviors.
- Author
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Ronconi L, Cantiani C, Riva V, Franchin L, Bettoni R, Gori S, Bulf H, Valenza E, and Facoetti A
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Infant, Autism Spectrum Disorder physiopathology, Autism Spectrum Disorder psychology, Social Behavior, Communication, Longitudinal Studies, Autistic Disorder psychology, Autistic Disorder physiopathology, Cues, Saccades physiology, Adult, Attention physiology, Parents psychology
- Abstract
Attentional reorienting is dysfunctional not only in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), but also in infants who will develop ASD, thus constituting a potential causal factor of future social interaction and communication abilities. Following the research domain criteria framework, we hypothesized that the presence of subclinical autistic traits in parents should lead to atypical infants' attentional reorienting, which in turn should impact on their future socio-communication behavior in toddlerhood. During an attentional cueing task, we measured the saccadic latencies in a large sample (total enrolled n = 89; final sample n = 71) of 8-month-old infants from the general population as a proxy for their stimulus-driven attention. Infants were grouped in a high parental traits (HPT; n = 23) or in a low parental traits (LPT; n = 48) group, according to the degree of autistic traits self-reported by their parents. Infants (n = 33) were then longitudinally followed to test their socio-communicative behaviors at 21 months. Results show a sluggish reorienting system, which was a longitudinal predictor of future socio-communicative skills at 21 months. Our combined transgenerational and longitudinal findings suggest that the early functionality of the stimulus-driven attentional network-redirecting attention from one event to another-could be directly connected to future social and communication development., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2024
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31. Age, Motion, Medical, and Psychiatric Associations With Incidental Findings in Brain MRI.
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Tobe RH, Tu L, Roberts M, Kiar G, Breland MM, Tian Y, Kang M, Ross R, Ryan MM, Valenza E, Alexander L, MacKay-Brandt A, Colcombe SJ, Franco AR, and Milham MP
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Child, Male, Cross-Sectional Studies, Atrophy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Incidental Findings, Brain diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Importance: Few investigations have evaluated rates of brain-based magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) incidental findings (IFs) in large lifespan samples, their stability over time, or their associations with health outcomes., Objectives: To examine rates of brain-based IFs across the lifespan, their persistence, and their associations with phenotypic indicators of behavior, cognition, and health; to compare quantified motion with radiologist-reported motion and evaluate its associations with IF rates; and to explore IF consistency across multiple visits., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional study included participants from the Nathan Kline Institute-Rockland Sample (NKI-RS), a lifespan community-ascertained sample, and the Healthy Brain Network (HBN), a cross-sectional community self-referred pediatric sample focused on mental health and learning disorders. The NKI-RS enrolled participants (ages 6-85 years) between March 2012 and March 2020 and had longitudinal participants followed up for as long as 4 years. The HBN enrolled participants (ages 5-21 years) between August 2015 and October 2021. Clinical neuroradiology MRI reports were coded for radiologist-reported motion as well as presence, type, and clinical urgency (category 1, no abnormal findings; 2, no referral recommended; 3, consider referral; and 4, immediate referral) of IFs. MRI reports were coded from June to October 2021. Data were analyzed from November 2021 to February 2023., Main Outcomes and Measures: Rates and type of IFs by demographic characteristics, health phenotyping, and motion artifacts; longitudinal stability of IFs; and Euler number in projecting radiologist-reported motion., Results: A total of 1300 NKI-RS participants (781 [60.1%] female; mean [SD] age, 38.9 [21.8] years) and 2772 HBN participants (976 [35.2%] female; mean [SD] age, 10.0 [3.5] years) had health phenotyping and neuroradiology-reviewed MRI scans. IFs were common, with 284 of 2956 children (9.6%) and 608 of 1107 adults (54.9%) having IFs, but rarely of clinical concern (category 1: NKI-RS, 619 [47.6%]; HBN, 2561 [92.4%]; category 2: NKI-RS, 647 [49.8%]; HBN, 178 [6.4%]; category 3: NKI-RS, 79 [6.1%]; HBN, 30 [1.1%]; category 4: NKI-RS: 12 [0.9%]; HBN, 6 [0.2%]). Overall, 46 children (1.6%) and 79 adults (7.1%) required referral for their IFs. IF frequency increased with age. Elevated blood pressure and BMI were associated with increased T2 hyperintensities and age-related cortical atrophy. Radiologist-reported motion aligned with Euler-quantified motion, but neither were associated with IF rates., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cross-sectional study, IFs were common, particularly with increasing age, although rarely clinically significant. While T2 hyperintensity and age-related cortical atrophy were associated with BMI and blood pressure, IFs were not associated with other behavioral, cognitive, and health phenotyping. Motion may not limit clinical IF detection.
- Published
- 2024
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32. Linking vestibular, tactile, and somatosensory rhythm perception to language development in infancy.
- Author
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Russo S, Carnovalini F, Calignano G, Arfé B, Rodà A, and Valenza E
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Hearing, Language, Linguistics, Perception, Male, Infant, Child, Preschool, Language Development, Music
- Abstract
First experiences with rhythm occur in the womb, with different rhythmic sources being available to the human fetus. Among sensory modalities, vestibular, tactile, and somatosensory perception plays a crucial role in early processing. However, a limited number of studies so far have specifically focused on VTS rhythms in language development. The present work investigated VTS rhythmic abilities and their role in language acquisition through two experiments with 45 infants (21 females, sex assigned at birth; M age = 661.6 days, SD = 192.6) with middle/high socioeconomic status. Specifically, 37 infants from the original sample completed Experiment 1, assessing VTS rhythmic abilities through a vibrotactile tool for music perception. In Experiment 2, linguistic abilities were evaluated in 40 participants from the same cohort, specifically testing phonological and prosodic processing. Discrimination abilities for rhythmic and linguistic stimuli were inferred from changes in pupil diameter to contingent visual stimuli over time, through a Tobii X-60 eye-tracker. The predictive effect of VTS rhythmic abilities on linguistic processing and the developmental changes occurring across ages were explored in the 32 infants who completed both Experiments 1 and 2 by means of generalized, additive and linear, mixed-effect models. Results are discussed in terms of cross-sensory (i.e., haptic to hearing) and cross-domain (i.e., music to language) effects of rhythm on language acquisition, with implications for typical and atypical development., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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33. Interconnected Pathways: Postural Stability and Vocabulary Skills in Preschool-Aged Children.
- Author
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Calignano G, Lettere G, Leo I, Maritan F, Mattera L, Granata P, Lucangeli D, and Valenza E
- Abstract
Previous research has highlighted an interplay between postural abilities and linguistic skills during infancy. However, this relationship could undergo further radical transformations in other periods of development. This current study explored a plausible network of relationships among postural abilities and vocabulary skills in a substantial cohort (N = 222) of preschoolers aged between 2 and 5 years-a developmental phase critical for refining both language and motor competencies. Here, postural stability was measured in terms of balance duration and accuracy, alongside an assessment of comprehension and expressive vocabulary skills. Employing a diverse set of techniques, i.e., data and missing data visualization and multilevel regression analysis, task complexity and age emerged as crucial factors explaining our data. In addition, network analysis indicates that language production plays a central role within postural and language interdomain networks. The resulting discussion focuses on the useful implications of this study for the assessment of typical preschool development, which would benefit from tailored methodological inspections guided by developmental theories that are framed in inter-domain approaches.
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
34. The pupil collaboration: A multi-lab, multi-method analysis of goal attribution in infants.
- Author
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Sirois S, Brisson J, Blaser E, Calignano G, Donenfeld J, Hepach R, Hochmann JR, Kaldy Z, Liszkowski U, Mayer M, Ross-Sheehy S, Russo S, and Valenza E
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Infant, Motivation, Recognition, Psychology, Social Perception, Pupil, Goals
- Abstract
The rise of pupillometry in infant research over the last decade is associated with a variety of methods for data preprocessing and analysis. Although pupil diameter is increasingly recognized as an alternative measure of the popular cumulative looking time approach used in many studies (Jackson & Sirois, 2022), an open question is whether the many approaches used to analyse this variable converge. To this end, we proposed a crowdsourced approach to pupillometry analysis. A dataset from 30 9-month-old infants (15 girls; M
age = 282.9 days, SD = 8.10) was provided to 7 distinct teams for analysis. The data were obtained from infants watching video sequences showing a hand, initially resting between two toys, grabbing one of them (after Woodward, 1998). After habituation, infants were shown (in random order) a sequence of four test events that varied target position and target toy. Results show that looking times reflect primarily the familiar path of the hand, regardless of target toy. Gaze data similarly show this familiarity effect of path. The pupil dilation analyses show that features of pupil baseline measures (duration and temporal location) as well as data retention variation (trial and/or participant) due to different inclusion criteria from the various analysis methods are linked to divergences in findings. Two of the seven teams found no significant findings, whereas the remaining five teams differ in the pattern of findings for main and interaction effects. The discussion proposes guidelines for best practice in the analysis of pupillometry data., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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35. Face specific neural anticipatory activity in infants 4 and 9 months old.
- Author
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Mento G, Duma GM, Valenza E, and Farroni T
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain physiology, Brain Mapping, Cues, Electroencephalography, Humans, Infant, Photic Stimulation, Contingent Negative Variation physiology, Voice
- Abstract
The possibility of predicting the specific features of forthcoming environmental events is fundamental for our survival since it allows us to proactively regulate our behaviour, enhancing our chance of survival. This is particularly crucial for stimuli providing socially relevant information for communication and interaction, such as faces. While it has been consistently demonstrated that the human brain shows preferential and ontogenetically early face-evoked activity, it is unknown whether specialized neural routes are engaged by face-predictive activity early in life. In this study, we recorded high-density electrophysiological (ERP) activity in adults and 9- and 4-month-old infants undergoing an audio-visual paradigm purposely designed to predict the appearance of faces or objects starting from congruent auditory cues (i.e., human voice vs nonhuman sounds). Contingent negative variation or CNV was measured to investigate anticipatory activity as a reliable marker of stimulus expectancy even in the absence of explicit motor demand. The results suggest that CNV can also be reliably elicited in the youngest group of 4-month-old infants, providing further evidence that expectation-related anticipatory activity is an intrinsic, early property of the human cortex. Crucially, the findings also indicate that the predictive information provided by the cue (i.e., human voice vs nonhuman sounds) turns into the recruitment of different anticipatory neural dynamics for faces and objects., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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36. The unique role of novel linguistic labels on the disengagement of visual attention.
- Author
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Calignano G, Valenza E, Vespignani F, Russo S, and Sulpizio S
- Subjects
- Humans, Linguistics, Saccades
- Abstract
Do novel linguistic labels have privileged access to attentional resources compared to non-linguistic labels? This study explores this possibility through two experiments with a training and an attentional overlap task. Experiment 1 investigates how novel label and object-only stimuli influence resource allocation and disengagement of visual attention. Experiment 2 tests the impact of linguistic information on visual attention by comparing novel tones and labels. Because disengagement of attention is affected both by the salience of the perceptual stimulus and by the degree of familiarity with the stimulus to be disengaged from, we compared pupil size variations and saccade latency under different test conditions: (a) consistent with (i.e., identical to) the training; (b) inconsistent with the training (i.e., with an altered feature), and (c) deprived of one feature only in Experiment 1. Experiment 1 indicated a general consistency advantage (and deprived disadvantage) driven by linguistic label-object pairs compared to object-only stimuli. Experiment 2 revealed that tone-object pairs led to higher pupil dilation and longer saccade latency than linguistic label-object pairs. Our results suggest that novel linguistic labels preferentially impact the early orienting of attention.
- Published
- 2021
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37. Attentional shift within and between faces: Evidence from children with and without a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder.
- Author
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Valenza E and Calignano G
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Photic Stimulation, Attention, Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnosis, Facial Recognition
- Abstract
Evidence of attentional atypicalities for faces in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) are far from being confirmed. Using eye-tracking technology we compared space-based and object-based attention in children with, and without, a diagnosis of ASD. By capitalizing on Egly's paradigm, we presented two objects (2 faces and their phase-scrambled equivalent) and cued a location in one of the two objects. Then, a target appeared at the same location as the cue (Valid condition), or at a different location within the same object (Same Object condition), or at a different location in another object (Different Object condition). The attentional benefit/cost in terms of time for target detection in each of the three conditions was computed. The findings revealed that target detection was always faster in the valid condition than in the invalid condition, regardless of the type of stimulus and the group of children. Thus, no difference emerged between the two groups in terms of space-based attention. Conversely the two groups differed in object-based attention. Children without a diagnosis of ASD showed attentional shift cost with phase-scrambled stimuli, but not with faces. Instead, children with a diagnosis of ASD deployed similar attentional strategies to focus on faces and their phase-scrambled version., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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38. An Integrated Perspective on Spatio-Temporal Attention and Infant Language Acquisition.
- Author
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Russo S, Calignano G, Dispaldro M, and Valenza E
- Subjects
- Auditory Perception, Discrimination, Psychological, Humans, Infant, Italy, Language Development, Speech
- Abstract
Efficiency in the early ability to switch attention toward competing visual stimuli (spatial attention) may be linked to future ability to detect rapid acoustic changes in linguistic stimuli (temporal attention). To test this hypothesis, we compared individual performances in the same cohort of Italian-learning infants in two separate tasks: (i) an overlap task, measuring disengagement efficiency for visual stimuli at 4 months (Experiment 1), and (ii) an auditory discrimination task for trochaic syllabic sequences at 7 months (Experiment 2). Our results indicate that an infant's efficiency in processing competing information in the visual field (i.e., visuospatial attention; Exp. 1) correlates with the subsequent ability to orient temporal attention toward relevant acoustic changes in the speech signal (i.e., temporal attention; Exp. 2). These results point out the involvement of domain-general attentional processes (not specific to language or the sensorial domain) playing a pivotal role in the development of early language skills in infancy.
- Published
- 2021
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39. Attentional engagement during syllable discrimination: The role of salient prosodic cues in 6- to 8-month-old infants.
- Author
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Calignano G, Dispaldro M, Russo S, and Valenza E
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Language, Phonetics, Speech, Cues, Speech Perception
- Abstract
Prosodic cues drive speech segmentation and guide syllable discrimination. However, less is known about the attentional mechanisms underlying an infant's ability to benefit from prosodic cues. This study investigated how 6- to 8-month-old Italian infants allocate their attention to strong vs. weak syllables after familiarization with four repeats of a single CV sequence with alternating strong and weak syllables (different syllables on each trial). In the discrimination test-phase, either the strong or the weak syllable was replaced by a pure tone matching the suprasegmental characteristics of the segmental syllable, i.e., duration, loudness and pitch, whereas the familiarized stimulus was presented as a control. By using an eye-tracker, attention deployment (fixation times) and cognitive resource allocation (pupil dilation) were measured under conditions of high and low saliency that corresponded to the strong and weak syllabic changes, respectively. Italian learning infants were found to look longer and also to show, through pupil dilation, more attention to changes in strong syllable replacement rather than weak syllable replacement, compared to the control condition. These data offer insights into the strategies used by infants to deploy their attention towards segmental units guided by salient prosodic cues, like the stress pattern of syllables, during speech segmentation., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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40. The role of prosody in infants' preference for speech: A comparison between speech and birdsong.
- Author
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Santolin C, Russo S, Calignano G, Saffran JR, and Valenza E
- Abstract
Speech preferences emerge very early in infancy, pointing to a special status for speech in auditory processing and a crucial role of prosody in driving infant preferences. Recent theoretical models suggest that infant auditory perception may initially encompass a broad range of human and nonhuman vocalizations, then tune in to relevant sounds for the acquisition of species-specific communication sounds. However, little is known about sound properties eliciting infants' tuning-in to speech. To address this issue, we presented a group of 4-month-olds with segments of non-native speech (Mandarin Chinese) and birdsong, a nonhuman vocalization that shares some prosodic components with speech. A second group of infants was presented with the same segment of birdsong paired with Mandarin played in reverse. Infants showed an overall preference for birdsong over non-native speech. Moreover, infants in the Backward condition preferred birdsong over backward speech whereas infants in the Forward condition did not show clear preference. These results confirm the prominent role of prosody in early auditory processing and suggest that infants' preferences may privilege communicative vocalizations featured by certain prosodic dimensions regardless of the biological source of the sound, human or nonhuman., (© International Congress of Infant Studies (ICIS).)
- Published
- 2019
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41. Persistent primary reflexes affect motor acts: Potential implications for autism spectrum disorder.
- Author
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Chinello A, Di Gangi V, and Valenza E
- Subjects
- Aptitude, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Nonverbal Communication, Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnosis, Autism Spectrum Disorder physiopathology, Autism Spectrum Disorder psychology, Child Development, Gestures, Motor Skills, Reflex
- Abstract
In typical motor development progress in use of goal-directed actions and communicative gestures depends on the inhibition of several primitive reflexes, especially those that involve the hand or mouth. This study explored the relationship between the persistence of primitive reflexes that involve the hand or mouth and the motor repertoire in a sample of 12- to 17-month-old infants. Moreover, since children with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) often have difficulty in performing skilled movements and show poor gesture repertoire, and since ASD represents the upper extreme of a constellation of traits that may be continuously distributed in the general population, we investigated the relationship between the persistence of primitive reflexes in the same sample of infants and the subclinical autistic traits measured in their parents. Results revealed that the persistence of the primitive reflexes correlated with motor repertoire irrespective of infant's age, and it was greater among infants whose parents had more subclinical autistic traits. Our findings suggest that the persistence of primitive reflexes might alter the developmental trajectory of future motor ability and therefore their evaluation might be an early indicator of atypical development., (Copyright © 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Spatiotemporal neurodynamics of automatic temporal expectancy in 9-month old infants.
- Author
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Mento G and Valenza E
- Subjects
- Brain Mapping methods, Electroencephalography methods, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Motor Cortex metabolism, Motor Cortex physiology, Brain physiology, Contingent Negative Variation physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
Anticipating events occurrence (Temporal Expectancy) is a crucial capacity for survival. Yet, there is little evidence about the presence of cortical anticipatory activity from infancy. In this study we recorded the High-density electrophysiological activity in 9 month-old infants and adults undergoing an audio-visual S1-S2 paradigm simulating a lifelike "Peekaboo" game inducing automatic temporal expectancy of smiling faces. The results indicate in the S2-preceding Contingent Negative Variation (CNV) an early electrophysiological signature of expectancy-based anticipatory cortical activity. Moreover, the progressive CNV amplitude increasing across the task suggested that implicit temporal rule learning is at the basis of expectancy building-up over time. Cortical source reconstruction suggested a common CNV generator between adults and infants in the right prefrontal cortex. The decrease in the activity of this area across the task (time-on-task effect) further implied an early, core role of this region in implicit temporal rule learning. By contrast, a time-on-task activity boost was found in the supplementary motor area (SMA) in adults and in the temporoparietal regions in infants. Altogether, our findings suggest that the capacity of the human brain to translate temporal predictions into anticipatory neural activity emerges ontogenetically early, although the underlying spatiotemporal cortical dynamics change across development.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The attentional 'zoom-lens' in 8-month-old infants.
- Author
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Ronconi L, Franchin L, Valenza E, Gori S, and Facoetti A
- Subjects
- Cues, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Photic Stimulation methods, Visual Perception physiology, Attention physiology, Eye Movement Measurements, Eye Movements physiology, Saccades physiology, Visual Fields physiology
- Abstract
The spatial attention mechanisms of orienting and zooming cooperate to properly select visual information from the environment and plan eye movements accordingly. Despite the fact that orienting ability has been extensively studied in infancy, the zooming mechanism--namely, the ability to distribute the attentional resources to a small or large portion of the visual field--has never been tested before. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the attentional zooming abilities of 8-month-old infants. An eye-tracker device was employed to measure the saccadic latencies (SLs) at the onset of a visual target displayed at two eccentricities. The size of the more eccentric target was adjusted in order to counteract the effect of cortical magnification. Before the target display, attentional resources were automatically focused (zoom-in) or spread out (zoom-out) by using a small or large cue, respectively. Two different cue-target intervals were also employed to measure the time course of this attentional mechanism. The results showed that infants' SLs varied as a function of the cue size. Moreover, a clear time course emerged, demonstrating that infants can rapidly adjust the attentional focus size during a pre-saccadic temporal window. These findings could serve as an early marker for neurodevelopmental disorders associated with attentional zooming dysfunction such as autism and dyslexia., (© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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44. Many faces, one rule: the role of perceptual expertise in infants' sequential rule learning.
- Author
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Bulf H, Brenna V, Valenza E, Johnson SP, and Turati C
- Abstract
Rule learning is a mechanism that allows infants to recognize and generalize rule-like patterns, such as ABB or ABA. Although infants are better at learning rules from speech vs. non-speech, rule learning can be applied also to frequently experienced visual stimuli, suggesting that perceptual expertise with material to be learned is critical in enhancing rule learning abilities. Yet infants' rule learning has never been investigated using one of the most commonly experienced visual stimulus category available in infants' environment, i.e., faces. Here, we investigate 7-month-olds' ability to extract rule-like patterns from sequences composed of upright faces and compared their results to those of infants who viewed inverted faces, which presumably are encountered far less frequently than upright faces. Infants were habituated with face triads in either an ABA or ABB condition followed by a test phase with ABA and ABB triads composed of faces that differed from those showed during habituation. When upright faces were used, infants generalized the pattern presented during habituation to include the new face identities showed during testing, but when inverted faces were presented, infants failed to extract the rule. This finding supports the idea that perceptual expertise can modulate 7-month-olds' abilities to detect rule-like patterns.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Face Orientation and Motion Differently Affect the Deployment of Visual Attention in Newborns and 4-Month-Old Infants.
- Author
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Valenza E, Otsuka Y, Bulf H, Ichikawa H, Kanazawa S, and Yamaguchi MK
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Attention, Child Development physiology, Facial Recognition, Motion Perception
- Abstract
Orienting visual attention allows us to properly select relevant visual information from a noisy environment. Despite extensive investigation of the orienting of visual attention in infancy, it is unknown whether and how stimulus characteristics modulate the deployment of attention from birth to 4 months of age, a period in which the efficiency in orienting of attention improves dramatically. The aim of the present study was to compare 4-month-old infants' and newborns' ability to orient attention from central to peripheral stimuli that have the same or different attributes. In Experiment 1, all the stimuli were dynamic and the only attribute of the central and peripheral stimuli to be manipulated was face orientation. In Experiment 2, both face orientation and motion of the central and peripheral stimuli were contrasted. The number of valid trials and saccadic latency were measured at both ages. Our results demonstrated that the deployment of attention is mainly influenced by motion at birth, while it is also influenced by face orientation at 4-month of age. These findings provide insight into the development of the orienting visual attention in the first few months of life and suggest that maturation may be not the only factor that determines the developmental change in orienting visual attention from birth to 4 months.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Paternal autistic traits are predictive of infants visual attention.
- Author
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Ronconi L, Facoetti A, Bulf H, Franchin L, Bettoni R, and Valenza E
- Subjects
- Child, Communication, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Orientation, Social Behavior, Attention, Autistic Disorder psychology, Fathers psychology, Vision, Ocular
- Abstract
Since subthreshold autistic social impairments aggregate in family members, and since attentional dysfunctions appear to be one of the earliest cognitive markers of children with autism, we investigated in the general population the relationship between infants' attentional functioning and the autistic traits measured in their parents. Orienting and alerting attention systems were measured in 8-month-old infants using a spatial cueing paradigm. Results showed that only paternal autistic traits were linked to their children's: (1) attentional disengagement; (2) rapid attentional orienting and (3) alerting. Our findings suggest that an early dysfunction of orienting and alerting systems might alter the developmental trajectory of future ability in social cognition and communication.
- Published
- 2014
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47. Object-based visual attention in 8-month-old infants: evidence from an eye-tracking study.
- Author
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Bulf H and Valenza E
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Cues, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Photic Stimulation, Reaction Time, Space Perception, Time Factors, Young Adult, Attention physiology, Child Development physiology, Eye Movements physiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology
- Abstract
Visual attention is one of the infant's primary tools for gathering relevant information from the environment for further processing and learning. The space-based component of visual attention in infants has been widely investigated; however, the object-based component of visual attention has received scarce interest. This scarcity is surprising, given the importance of objects in driving infants' attention and predispositions to attend to object information. Here, we investigated the object-based component of attention in 8-month-old infants. An eye tracker measured the saccade latencies to find a target that could appear in a previously cued end of 2 bars (valid targets), in the other end of the cued bar (invalid same-object targets), or in the other bar but at the same distance from the cue (invalid different-object targets). Bars were unoccluded or partly occluded; if attention is object based, it should also operate on objects that require perceptual completion. After verifying in a sample of adults (Experiment 1) that a measure of saccade latency suitably assessed space-based and object-based attention, we tested 8-month-old infants (Experiment 2) using the same procedure. The results showed that in both adults and infants, target detection was faster for valid targets than for invalid ones (space-based effect). Moreover, for both the unoccluded and partly occluded conditions, detection was faster on invalid within-object trials than on invalid between-objects trials (object-based effect). These findings demonstrate that visual objects can operate as units of attention for infants by the age of 8 months, offering implications for cognitive development.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Discrimination and ordinal judgments of temporal durations at 3 months.
- Author
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Gava L, Valenza E, Di Bono MG, and Tosatto C
- Subjects
- Child Development physiology, Female, Humans, Infant, Knowledge, Male, Photic Stimulation, Attention physiology, Discrimination, Psychological physiology, Infant Behavior psychology, Judgment physiology, Time Perception physiology
- Abstract
This study presents the first evidence that 3-month-old infants success in a timing matching task and in an ordinal timing task, when numerical information is controlled. Three-month-old infants discriminated brief temporal durations that differed by a 1:3 ratio, relying solely on temporal information. Moreover, at 3 months of age infants were able to discriminate between monotonic and non-monotonic time-based series, when numerical and temporal information were inconsistent. These findings strengthen the hypothesis that a magnitude representational system for temporal quantities is operating very early in the ontogenetic development., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Visual statistical learning in the newborn infant.
- Author
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Bulf H, Johnson SP, and Valenza E
- Subjects
- Cues, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Photic Stimulation, Visual Perception physiology, Attention physiology, Habituation, Psychophysiologic physiology, Probability Learning
- Abstract
Statistical learning - implicit learning of statistical regularities within sensory input - is a way of acquiring structure within continuous sensory environments. Statistics computation, initially shown to be involved in word segmentation, has been demonstrated to be a general mechanism that operates across domains, across time and space, and across species. Recently, statistical leaning has been reported to be present even at birth when newborns were tested with a speech stream. The aim of the present study was to extend this finding, by investigating whether newborns' ability to extract statistics operates in multiple modalities, as found for older infants and adults. Using the habituation procedure, two experiments were carried out in which visual sequences were presented. Results demonstrate that statistical learning is a general mechanism that extracts statistics across domain since the onset of sensory experience. Intriguingly, present data reveal that newborn learner's limited cognitive resources constrain the functioning of statistical learning, narrowing the range of what can be learned., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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50. Early development of object unity: evidence for perceptual completion in newborns.
- Author
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Valenza E and Bulf H
- Subjects
- Child Development, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Optical Illusions, Photic Stimulation, Visual Perception, Form Perception, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Perceptual Closure
- Abstract
The present study aimed to investigate whether perceptual completion is available at birth, in the absence of any visual experience. An extremely underspecified kinetic visual display composed of four spatially separated fragments arranged to give rise to an illusory rectangle that occluded a vertical rod (illusory condition) or rotated so as not to elicit perceptual grouping (control condition) was constructed. After newborns' ability to detect the particular kind of rod-and-box display used in the present study had been probed (Experiment 1), they were habituated to the illusory rod-and-box display (Experiment 2), to the control display that did not contain illusory contours (Experiment 3), and to a standard real rod-and-box display akin to those used in previous infants' studies (Experiment 4). Newborns perceived the rod as a connected unit either in the illusory condition (Experiment 2) or in the real condition (Experiment 4), as documented by a preference for a broken rod over a complete rod during the test phase, but not when the occluder was absent (Experiment 3). In all experiments newborns showed no preference between the two test stimuli (control condition), avoiding the possibility that newborns have a spontaneous preference for one test display over the other. Overall, the results of the present study provide evidence that the ability to achieve object unity (1) stems from intrinsic properties of the human perceptual system and (2) is operative from birth, given the right conditions., (© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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