1. Perception of invisible masked objects in early infancy
- Author
-
Yusuke Nakashima, Masami K. Yamaguchi, and So Kanazawa
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual perception ,genetic structures ,media_common.quotation_subject ,First year of life ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,Backward masking ,media_common ,Multidisciplinary ,Infant ,Reproducibility of Results ,Biological Sciences ,Early infancy ,Form Perception ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,visual development ,Psychological and Cognitive Sciences ,Visual Perception ,Female ,backward masking ,Psychology ,Facial Recognition ,Perceptual Masking ,Photic Stimulation ,recurrent processing - Abstract
Significance Recent studies in neuroscience suggest that visual perception is not processed by the purely feed-forward system but by the interaction of forward, horizontal, and feedback processing called recurrent loops. The present study examined the development of recurrent processing using visual backward masking, a perceptual phenomenon in which a visual stimulus is rendered invisible by a mask that follows the stimulus, possibly because of the disruption of recurrent processing. We showed that backward masking is ineffective for infants under 7 mo of age and that they can perceive masked objects that older infants cannot see because of masking. These results suggest that recurrent processing is immature in early infancy and that the mechanisms of visual perception drastically change around this age., Recurrent loops in the visual cortex play a critical role in visual perception, which is likely not mediated by purely feed-forward pathways. However, the development of recurrent loops is poorly understood. The role of recurrent processing has been studied using visual backward masking, a perceptual phenomenon in which a visual stimulus is rendered invisible by a following mask, possibly because of the disruption of recurrent processing. Anatomical studies have reported that recurrent pathways are immature in early infancy. This raises the possibility that younger infants process visual information mainly in a feed-forward manner, and thus, they might be able to perceive visual stimuli that adults cannot see because of backward masking. Here, we show that infants under 7 mo of age are immune to visual backward masking and that masked stimuli remain visible to younger infants while older infants cannot perceive them. These results suggest that recurrent processing is immature in infants under 7 mo and that they are able to perceive objects even without recurrent processing. Our findings indicate that the algorithm for visual perception drastically changes in the second half of the first year of life.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF