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Article
The Role of Shape Recognition in Figure/Ground Perception in Infancy
Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
  • Hannah White
  • Rachel Jubran, University of Kentucky
  • Alison Heck, University of Kentucky
  • Alyson Chroust, East Tennessee State Unversity
  • Ramesh S. Bhatt, University of Kentucky
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-30-2018
Description

In this study we sought to determine whether infants, like adults, utilize previous experience to guide figure/ground processing. After familiarization to a shape, 5-month-olds preferentially attended to the side of an ambiguous figure/ground test stimulus corresponding to that shape, suggesting that they were viewing that portion as the figure. Infants’ failure to exhibit this preference in a control condition in which both sides of the test stimulus were displayed as figures indicated that the results in the experimental condition were not due to a preference between two figure shapes. These findings demonstrate for the first time that figure/ground processing in infancy is sensitive to top-down influence. Thus, a critical aspect of figure/ground processing is functional early in life.

Citation Information
Hannah White, Rachel Jubran, Alison Heck, Alyson Chroust, et al.. "The Role of Shape Recognition in Figure/Ground Perception in Infancy" Psychonomic Bulletin & Review Vol. 25 Iss. 4 (2018) p. 1381 - 1387 ISSN: 1531-5320
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/alyson-chroust/32/