Gestalt Relations and Object Perception: A Developmental Study

We investigated whether adults and infants aged 3, 5, and 9 months perceive the unity and boundaries of visible objects in accord with the Gestalt relations of color and texture similarity, good continuation, or good form. Adults and infants were presented with simple but unfamiliar displays in which all three Gestalt relations specified either one object or two objects—perception of the objects was assessed by a verbal rating method in the adults and by a preferential looking method in the infants. The Gestalt relations appeared to influence the adults' perceptions strongly. However, the relations appeared to have no effect on the perceptions of 3-month-old infants and weak effects on the perceptions of 5-month-old and 9-month-old infants. The findings support the suggestion that developmental changes in object perception occur slowly. These changes, and the organizational phenomena to which Gestalt psychology called attention, may depend in part on the child's developing ability to recognize objects of particular kinds.

[1]  J. Hochberg,et al.  A quantitative approach to figural "goodness". , 1953, Journal of experimental psychology.

[2]  E. Brunswik,et al.  Ecological cue-validity of proximity and of other Gestalt factors. , 1953, The American journal of psychology.

[3]  S. Siegel,et al.  Nonparametric Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences , 2022, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[4]  D. Marr,et al.  Representation and recognition of the spatial organization of three-dimensional shapes , 1978, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences.

[5]  G. Kanizsa,et al.  Organization in Vision: Essays on Gestalt Perception , 1979 .

[6]  A. Meltzoff,et al.  Intermodal matching by human neonates , 1979, Nature.

[7]  R H Day,et al.  Visual shape perception in early infancy. , 1979, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.

[8]  B. Bertenthal,et al.  Development of visual organization: the perception of subjective contours. , 1980, Child development.

[9]  R. Held,et al.  Stereoacuity of human infants. , 1980, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[10]  G. Ross Categorization in 1- to 2-yr-olds. , 1980 .

[11]  C. Gross,et al.  Perception of symmetry in infancy. , 1981 .

[12]  E. Spelke,et al.  Perception of partly occluded objects in infancy , 1983, Cognitive Psychology.

[13]  A. Witkin,et al.  On the Role of Structure in Vision , 1983 .

[14]  Donald D. Hoffman,et al.  Parts of recognition , 1984, Cognition.

[15]  M. Haith,et al.  Infant visual response to gestalt geometric forms , 1984 .

[16]  E. Spelke,et al.  Gestalt relations and object perception in infancy , 1984 .

[17]  Albert Yonas,et al.  Reaching as a measure of infants' spatial perception. , 1985 .

[18]  Marc H. Bornstein,et al.  Human infant color vision and color perception , 1985 .

[19]  E. Spelke,et al.  Object perception and object-directed reaching in infancy. , 1985, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[20]  W. Epstein,et al.  The status of the minimum principle in the theoretical analysis of visual perception. , 1985, Psychological bulletin.

[21]  Albert Yonas,et al.  The Development of Sensitivity of Kenetic, Binocular and Pictorial Depth Information in Human Infants , 1985 .

[22]  A. Yonas,et al.  Infants’ sensitivity to familiar size: The effect of memory on spatial perception , 1985, Perception & psychophysics.

[23]  E. Spelke,et al.  Infant perception of object unity from translatory motion in depth and vertical translation. , 1986, Child development.

[24]  R. Kaufmann-Hayoz,et al.  Kinetic contours in infants' visual perception. , 1986, Child development.

[25]  D R Proffitt,et al.  Perception of biomechanical motions by infants: implementation of various processing constraints. , 1987, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[26]  I. Biederman Recognition-by-components: a theory of human image understanding. , 1987, Psychological review.

[27]  E. Spelke,et al.  Perception of objects and object boundaries by 3‐month‐old infants , 1987 .

[28]  S. Ullman Aligning pictorial descriptions: An approach to object recognition , 1989, Cognition.

[29]  E. Markman Categorization and naming in children , 1989 .

[30]  E. Spelke,et al.  Object Perception in Infancy: Interaction of Spatial and Kinetic Information for Object Boundaries. , 1989 .

[31]  Elizabeth S. Spelke,et al.  Principles of Object Perception , 1990, Cogn. Sci..

[32]  R. Darlington,et al.  Regression and Linear Models , 1990 .

[33]  Barbara A. Shepperson,et al.  Countable entities: Developmental changes , 1990, Cognition.

[34]  Alan Slater,et al.  Newborn and older infants' perception of partly occluded objects☆ , 1990 .

[35]  C. Von Hofsten Structuring of early reaching movements: a longitudinal study. , 1991, Journal of motor behavior.

[36]  A. Streri,et al.  Voir, atteindre, toucher , 1991 .

[37]  P. Kellman,et al.  A theory of visual interpolation in object perception , 1991, Cognitive Psychology.

[38]  Voir, atteindre, toucher : les relations entre la vision et le toucher chez le bébé , 1991 .

[39]  Karen Wynn,et al.  Addition and subtraction by human infants , 1992, Nature.

[40]  E. Spelke,et al.  Origins of knowledge. , 1992, Psychological review.

[41]  J. Mandler,et al.  Concept formation in infancy , 1993 .

[42]  E. Spelke,et al.  Perceiving and reasoning about objects: Insights from infants , 1993 .