Author:
Linka Marcel,Sensoy Özlem,Karimpur Harun,Schwarzer Gudrun,de Haas Benjamin
Abstract
AbstractAdult gaze behaviour towards naturalistic scenes is highly biased towards semantic object classes. Little is known about the ontological development of these biases, nor about group-level differences in gaze behaviour between adults and preschoolers. Here, we let preschoolers (n = 34, age 5 years) and adults (n = 42, age 18–59 years) freely view 40 complex scenes containing objects with different semantic attributes to compare their fixation behaviour. Results show that preschool children allocate a significantly smaller proportion of dwell time and first fixations on Text and instead fixate Faces, Touched objects, Hands and Bodies more. A predictive model of object fixations controlling for a range of potential confounds suggests that most of these differences can be explained by drastically reduced text salience in pre-schoolers and that this effect is independent of low-level salience. These findings are in line with a developmental attentional antagonism between text and body parts (touched objects and hands in particular), which resonates with recent findings regarding ‘cortical recycling’. We discuss this and other potential mechanisms driving salience differences between children and adults.
Funder
European Research Council
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Excellence Program of the Hessian Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research and Art
Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
3 articles.
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