How Infants Direct Their Gaze to Faces in the Presence of Other Objects: The Development of Face Preference Between 4 and 7 Months After Birth

Publication date

2025-01

Authors

Belteki, Z.ISNI 0000000506321750
Hessels, Roy S.ISNI 0000000492511886
Junge, Caroline M.M.ORCID 0000-0001-9876-8058ISNI 0000000393995491
Kemner, ChantalISNI 0000000397189075
van den Boomen, CarlijnORCID 0000-0002-0110-9919ISNI 0000000394210633

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Document Type

Article
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taverne

Abstract

From early in development, infants process faces in their environment differentially from other items. By around 6 months of age, they are able to orient toward faces in the presence of distractor items. This paper aimed to assess whether this preferential looking toward faces was observable prior to 6 months of age, and whether there were developmental trends. We assessed this using the face pop-out task, a free viewing eye-tracking experiment in which infants viewed arrays containing an image of a face, alongside four distractor items. We assessed whether infants at 4, 5, 6 and 7 months (n = 1585 participants) differed in the proportion of first looks, total dwell time, and frequency of fixations to faces compared to other items. All three outcome variables were significantly higher toward faces than toward any of the other items in all the age groups. Moreover, there were age-related differences across all measures—the older the infants were, the more pronounced their face preferences were. These age-related differences could not be attributed to differences in data quality, and thus suggest that face preference is observable at 4 months of age but shows a strong development until 6 months.

Keywords

development, eye tracking, face preference, faces, infants, Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health, Developmental and Educational Psychology

Citation

Belteki, Z, Hessels, R S, Junge, C M M, Kemner, C & van den Boomen, C 2025, 'How Infants Direct Their Gaze to Faces in the Presence of Other Objects : The Development of Face Preference Between 4 and 7 Months After Birth', Infancy, vol. 30, no. 1, e12633. https://doi.org/10.1111/infa.12633