Eye tracking as a measure of young infants' knowledge of objects
Lead Research Organisation:
Lancaster University
Department Name: Psychology
Abstract
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Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
Gavin Bremner (Principal Investigator) | |
Alan Slater (Co-Investigator) |
Publications
Bremner J
(2015)
Perception of Object Persistence: The Origins of Object Permanence in Infancy
in Child Development Perspectives
Bremner JG
(2017)
Young infants' visual fixation patterns in addition and subtraction tasks support an object tracking account.
in Journal of experimental child psychology
Bremner JG
(2021)
Eye tracking provides no evidence that young infants understand path obstruction.
in Infant behavior & development
Bremner, J.G.
(2016)
Young infants' perception of complex occlusion events: Reasoning or perception?
Johnson SP
(2012)
Young infants' perception of the trajectories of two- and three-dimensional objects.
in Journal of experimental child psychology
Description | The use of an eye tracker allowed more precise test of various hypotheses regarding infants' knowledge of objects. More specifically, the eye tracker data supported a perceptual developmenta account of the origins of knowledge rather than an account based on innate understanding. |
Exploitation Route | The use of eye tracker measures has great potential to clarify our understanding of development of infant knowledge. |
Sectors | Other |