The decline of cross-species intersensory perception in human infants.

Between 6 and 10 months of age, infants become better at discriminating among native voices and human faces and worse at discriminating among nonnative voices and other species' faces. We tested whether these unisensory perceptual narrowing effects reflect a general ontogenetic feature of perceptual systems by testing across sensory modalities. We showed pairs of monkey faces producing two different vocalizations to 4-, 6-, 8-, and 10-month-old infants and asked whether they would prefer to look at the corresponding face when they heard one of the two vocalizations. Only the two youngest groups exhibited intersensory matching, indicating that perceptual narrowing is pan-sensory and a fundamental feature of perceptual development.

[1]  Sidney S. Simon,et al.  Merging of the Senses , 2008, Front. Neurosci..

[2]  S. Trehub,et al.  Metrical Categories in Infancy and Adulthood , 2005, Psychological science.

[3]  Franck Ramus,et al.  Perception and acquisition of linguistic rhythm by infants , 2003, Speech Commun..

[4]  D. Lewkowicz Heterogeneity and heterochrony in the development of intersensory perception. , 2002, Brain research. Cognitive brain research.

[5]  O. Pascalis,et al.  Is Face Processing Species-Specific During the First Year of Life? , 2002, Science.

[6]  M. Wallace,et al.  Sensory and Multisensory Responses in the Newborn Monkey Superior Colliculus , 2001, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[7]  A. Walker-Andrews,et al.  The role of person familiarity in young infants' perception of emotional expressions. , 2001, Child development.

[8]  D. Lewkowicz,et al.  The development of intersensory temporal perception: an epigenetic systems/limitations view. , 2000, Psychological bulletin.

[9]  M T Wallace,et al.  Development of Multisensory Neurons and Multisensory Integration in Cat Superior Colliculus , 1997, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[10]  D. Poulin-Dubois,et al.  Infants' Intermodal Knowledge about Gender. , 1994 .

[11]  David J. Lewkowicz,et al.  Infants' response to temporally based intersensory equivalence: The effect of synchronous sounds on visual preferences for moving stimuli , 1992 .

[12]  K. Stevens,et al.  Linguistic experience alters phonetic perception in infants by 6 months of age. , 1992, Science.

[13]  E. Bushnell,et al.  Infants' sensitivity to arbitrary pairings of color and taste , 1988 .

[14]  W. Greenough,et al.  Experience and brain development. , 1987, Child development.

[15]  David J. Lewkowicz,et al.  Developmental changes in infants' bisensory response to synchronous durations☆ , 1986 .

[16]  A. Walker-Andrews Intermodal perception of expressive behaviors: Relation of eye and voice? , 1986 .

[17]  A. Meltzoff,et al.  The bimodal perception of speech in infancy. , 1982, Science.

[18]  David J. Lewkowicz,et al.  Cross-modal equivalence in early infancy: Auditory–visual intensity matching. , 1980 .

[19]  P. L. Adams THE ORIGINS OF INTELLIGENCE IN CHILDREN , 1976 .

[20]  E. Gibson Principles of Perceptual Learning and Development , 1969 .

[21]  C. Wheddon,et al.  Speech Communication , 2014, Quality of Experience.

[22]  J. Werker,et al.  Infants' ability to match dynamic phonetic and gender information in the face and voice. , 2002, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[23]  H. Fitzgerald,et al.  A developmental study of classical conditioning. , 1967, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.

[24]  L. Hearnshaw,et al.  The comparative psychology of mental development , 1966 .