15 results on '"Simion, F A"'
Search Results
2. Lo sviluppo cognitivo: dalle teorie classiche ai nuovi orientamenti
- Author
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MACCHI CASSIA, VIOLA MARINA, Valenza, E, Simion, F., MACCHI CASSIA, V, Valenza, E, and Simion, F
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M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,sviluppo cognitivo - Published
- 2004
3. L’organizzazione della percezione visiva alla nascita
- Author
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Simion, F, MACCHI CASSIA, VIOLA MARINA, TURATI, CHIARA, Di Stefano, G, Vianello, R, Simion, F, MACCHI CASSIA, V, and Turati, C
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M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,neonato, organizzazione percettiva - Published
- 2002
4. The Visual Search of an Illusory Figure: A Comparison between 6-Month-Old Infants and Adults
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Francesca Simion, Hermann Bulf, Eloisa Valenza, Bulf, H, Valenza, E, and Simion, F
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Illusion ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Fixation, Ocular ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Child Development ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Artificial Intelligence ,Perception ,Saccades ,medicine ,Illusory contours ,Humans ,Visual attention ,Attention ,Selective attention ,Kanizsa illusory contours ,media_common ,Visual search ,Pop-out ,Infant ,Illusions ,Sensory Systems ,Ophthalmology ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Infant Behavior ,Female ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation - Abstract
The aim of the present study was to investigate how perceptual binding and selective attention operate during infants' and adults' visual search of an illusory figure. An eye-tracker system was used to test adults and infants in two conditions: illusory and non-illusory (real). In the illusory condition, a Kanizsa triangle was embedded among distractor pacmen which did not generate illusory contours. In the non-illusory condition, a real triangle was included in the same pacmen's display. The results showed that adults detected both the Kanizsa and the real figure automatically and without focal attention (experiment 1). In contrast, 6-month-old infants showed a pop-out effect only for the real figure (experiment 2). The failure of the illusory figure to trigger infants' attention was not due to infants' inability to perceive the illusory figure per se, as infants preferred the illusory figure over a non-illusory control stimulus in a classical preferential-looking task (experiment 3). Overall, these findings indicate that the illusory Kanizsa triangle triggers visual attention in adults, but not in infants, supporting evidence that at 6 months of age the binding processes involved in the perception of a Kanizsa figure do not operate in an adult-like manner.
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- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Newborns' local processing in schematic facelike configurations
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Francesca Simion, Viola Macchi Cassia, Chiara Turati, Teresa Farroni, Beatrice Dalla Barba, Simion, F, Farroni, T, MACCHI CASSIA, V, Turati, C, and Dalla Barba, B
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Communication ,business.industry ,Schematic ,Pattern recognition ,Retention interval ,newborn, faces, discrimination, local processing, delayed recognition memory ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Discriminative model ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,General pattern ,Artificial intelligence ,Habituation ,business ,Psychology - Abstract
The goal of the study was to provide a direct comparison of newborns' ability to process and store, over a 2min delay, the shape of the internal local elements of schematic facelike and non-facelike patterns. Two experiments were carried out using a visual habituation technique with an infant control procedure. The results demonstrate that newborns discriminated between two schematic facelike and non-facelike configurations that differed exclusively for the shape of the internal local elements (Expt I), and they maintained this discriminative ability even when recognition was tested after a 2min retention interval (Expt 2). The results are consistent with the existence of a general pattern learning mechanism that mediates newborns' ability to acquire information about any pattern, including faces (de Schonen & Mancini, 1995; de Schonen, Mancini, & Liegeois 1998; Johnson, 1997).
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- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Lo sviluppo della mente umana. Dalle teorie classiche ai nuovi orientamenti
- Author
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Macchi Cassia, V., Valenza, Eloisa, francesca simion, MACCHI CASSIA, V, Valenza, E, and Simion, F
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Modelli ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Teorie ,Sviluppo cognitivo - Abstract
Il volume offre un panorama aggiornato dei modelli teorici che la psicologia ha elaborato per spiegare le cause e i meccanismi che determinano lo sviluppo della mente umana. Dopo aver affrontato nella prima parte le teorie classiche, le autrici passano in rassegna, nella seconda parte, i modelli più recenti relativi allo sviluppo cognitivo, sottolineandone gli aspetti interdisciplinari. È così illustrato con chiarezza il fondamentale ruolo che questo filone di ricerca svolge nell’indagine sull’architettura e sul funzionamento della mente umana.
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- 2012
7. Face detection in complex visual displays: An eye-tracking study with 3- and 6-month-old infants and adults
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Francesca Simion, Chiara Turati, Gianmarco Altoè, Elisa Giorgio, Di Giorgio, E, Turati, C, Altoé, G, and Simion, F
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face processing, infants, perception ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual perception ,genetic structures ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Field Dependence-Independence ,Psychology, Child ,Fixation, Ocular ,Audiology ,Developmental psychology ,Discrimination Learning ,Gaze-contingency paradigm ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Orientation ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Discrimination learning ,Face detection ,Size Perception ,Visual search ,Eye movement ,Infant ,Recognition, Psychology ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Face ,Fixation (visual) ,Eye tracking ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
The ability to detect and prefer a face when embedded in complex visual displays was investigated in 3- and 6-month-old infants, as well as in adults, through a modified version of the visual search paradigm and the recording of eye movements. Participants (N= 43) were shown 32 visual displays that comprised a target face among 3 or 5 heterogeneous objects as distractors. Results demonstrated that faces captured and maintained adults' and 6-month-olds' attention, but not 3-month-olds' attention. Overall, the current study contributes to knowledge of the capacity of social stimuli to attract and maintain visual attention over other complex objects in young infants as well as in adults. © 2012 Elsevier Inc.
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- 2012
8. A predisposition for biological motion in the newborn baby
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Hermann Bulf, Francesca Simion, Lucia Regolin, Simion, F, Regolin, L, and Bulf, H
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual perception ,Time Factors ,Light ,Concept Formation ,Motion Perception ,Audiology ,Biology ,Motion (physics) ,Discrimination Learning ,Motion ,Discrimination, Psychological ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Orientation ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Motion perception ,Discrimination learning ,Animal species ,Newborns ,Multidisciplinary ,Infant, Newborn ,Biological Sciences ,Biological motion ,Preference ,Biological motion perception ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Visual Perception ,Female - Abstract
An inborn predisposition to attend to biological motion has long been theorized, but had so far been demonstrated only in one animal species (the domestic chicken). In particular, no preference for biological motion was reported for human infants of
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- 2008
9. Newborns face recognition is based on spatial frequencies below 0.5 cycles per degree
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Adélaïde de Heering, Francesca Simion, Chiara Turati, Bruno Rossion, Valerie Goffaux, Hermann Bulf, de Heering, A, Turati, C, Rossion, B, Bulf, H, Goffaux, V, Simion, F, RS: FPN CN I, RS: FPN CN 7, Language, and Cognitive Neuroscience
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Male ,Linguistics and Language ,Visual perception ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Speech recognition ,Spatial ability ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Fixation, Ocular ,Development ,Facial recognition system ,Language and Linguistics ,Developmental psychology ,Contrast Sensitivity ,Discrimination Learning ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Orientation ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Face processing ,Humans ,Attention ,Discrimination learning ,Habituation, Psychophysiologic ,Spatial frequencies ,Infant, Newborn ,Information processing ,Cognition ,Newborn ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Face ,Face (geometry) ,Female ,Spatial frequency ,Psychology ,M-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALE ,Perceptual Masking - Abstract
A critical question in Cognitive Science concerns how knowledge of specific domains emerges during development. Here we examined how limitations of the visual system during the first days of life may shape subsequent development of face processing abilities. By manipulating the bands of spatial frequencies of face images, we investigated what is the nature of the visual information that newborn infants rely on to perform face recognition. Newborns were able to extract from a face the visual information lying from 0 to 1 cpd (Experiment 1), but only a narrower 0-0.5 cpd spatial frequency range was successful to accomplish face recognition (Experiment 2). These results provide the first empirical support of a low spatial frequency advantage in individual face recognition at birth and suggest that early in life low-level, non-specific perceptual constraints affect the development of the face processing system.
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- 2008
10. 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
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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.
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- 2008
11. Newborns' face recognition over changes in viewpoint
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Hermann Bulf, Francesca Simion, Chiara Turati, Turati, C, Bulf, H, and Simion, F
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Linguistics and Language ,Visual perception ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Fixation, Ocular ,Facial recognition system ,Language and Linguistics ,Developmental psychology ,Nonverbal communication ,Cognition ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Habituation ,face recognition, infant, perceptual invariance, infant and face recognition, face processing ,Habituation, Psychophysiologic ,media_common ,Memoria ,Information processing ,Infant, Newborn ,Recognition, Psychology ,Face ,Visual Perception ,M-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALE ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The study investigated the origins of the ability to recognize faces despite rotations in depth. Four experiments are reported that tested, using the habituation technique, whether 1-to-3-day-old infants are able to recognize the invariant aspects of a face over changes in viewpoint. Newborns failed to recognize facial perceptual invariances between profile and full-face poses (Experiment 1), and profile and 3/4 poses (Experiment 3). Conversely, newborns recognized the identity of a face through full-face and 3/4 poses (Experiment 2). This result cannot be explained as a consequence of newborns’ inability to discriminate between the full-face and 3/4 points of view (Experiment 4). Overall, evidence was provided that newborns are able to derive a representation of an unfamiliar face that is resilient to a certain degree of rotation in depth, from full-face to 3/4 and vice versa.
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- 2007
12. 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
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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.
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- 2007
13. Individual differences in object-examining duration: do they reflect the use of different encoding strategies?
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Viola Macchi Cassia, Francesca Simion, MACCHI CASSIA, V, and Simion, F
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genetic structures ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Duration (music) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Information processing ,Encoding (semiotics) ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Psychology ,Object (philosophy) ,object manipulation, local-global processing, individual differences ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Much evidence has shown that individual differences in the duration of visual fixation in infancy are related to processing of wholistic versus featural properties of the stimuli. In the present study, an object-examining technique was used with 8-month-old infants to test the hypothesis that infants who display differential attention durations to visuo-manually presented stimuli will vary in their processing of wholistic versus featural aspects of the stimuli. The results confirmed the hypothesis, indicating that, after being familiarized with an object comprised of both global and local properties, long examiners attended more to an object comprised of new-local rather than new-global aspects, whereas short examiners attended more to the new-global rather than the new-local object. These findings provide support to the contention of the existence of close similarities between visual fixation and object-examining measures as indexes of infant information processing, extending the convergences between the two measures to the domain of individual differences.
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- 2002
14. Strumenti per la valutazione delle competenze neonatali
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Simion, Francesca, MACCHI CASSIA, V., Valenza, Eloisa, DALLA BARBA, Beatrice, Donnarumma D'Alessio, M, Ricci Bitti, P, Villone Bettocchi, G, Simion, F, MACCHI CASSIA, V, Valenza, E, and Dalla Barba, B
- Subjects
M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,neonati - Published
- 1995
15. La suzione non nutritiva: uno strumento per lo studio delle competenze neonatali
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Macchi Cassia, V., francesca simion, MACCHI CASSIA, V, and Simion, F
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M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,neonato, suzione non-nutritiva, attenzione - Abstract
The aim of the present study is to review the existing literature on Nonnutritive Sucking (NNS ) as a tool for investigating neonatal capabilities. Three research areas where NNS was utilized with newborn and infants are considered: regulation of states, visual scanning, attentional processes. In the light of new reported data concerning the relation between NNS and processing of visual and acoustic information at birth, a comprehensive interpretative framework is presented to explain the apparently contradictory results emerging from the three outlined research fields.
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