Infants rapidly detect human faces in complex naturalistic visual scenes

Dev Sci. 2019 Nov;22(6):e12829. doi: 10.1111/desc.12829. Epub 2019 Apr 29.

Abstract

Infants respond preferentially to faces and face-like stimuli from birth, but past research has typically presented faces in isolation or amongst an artificial array of competing objects. In the current study infants aged 3- to 12-months viewed a series of complex visual scenes; half of the scenes contained a person, the other half did not. Infants rapidly detected and oriented to faces in scenes even when they were not visually salient. Although a clear developmental improvement was observed in face detection and interest, all infants displayed sensitivity to the presence of a person in a scene, by displaying eye movements that differed quantifiably across a range of measures when viewing scenes that either did or did not contain a person. We argue that infant's face detection capabilities are ostensibly "better" with naturalistic stimuli and artificial array presentations used in previous studies have underestimated performance.

Keywords: eye movements; face detection; infancy; visual search.

MeSH terms

  • Eye Movements
  • Facial Recognition*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Male
  • Pattern Recognition, Visual
  • Visual Perception / physiology*