Mouth Motion and Growing Interest in Speech Drives the Developmental Shift in Infant Attention to the Mouth of a Talking Face

File
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Date Issued
2014
EDTF Date Created
2014
Description
Lewkowicz & Hansen-Tift found that when 4-month-old infants see and hear a person
talking, they look more at her eyes but that 8- and 10-mo infants look more at her mouth. The
developmental attentional shift to the mouth reflects infants’ growing interest in speech.
Attention to the mouth enables infants to gain access to redundant and maximally salient
audiovisual cues which then facilitate speech and language acquisition.
We investigated the separate role of mouth movement and vocalization cues in the attentional
shift from a talker’s eyes to the talker’s mouth. In 3 experiments, we used an eye-tracker to
measure the proportion of attention infants, 4-, 8-, and 10-mo, allocate to the eyes and mouth of a
static/silent face, a static/talking face, and a silently talking face. We found that when infants see
a static person, they attend to the eyes. Lewkowicz & Hansen-Tift found that when infants see
and hear a person talking, 4-mos look at the eyes whereas 8- and 10-mos look at the mouth.
When infants see a silently talking person, only 10-mos look at the mouth. These findings
demonstrate that the shift from the eyes to the mouth is mediated by three factors: dynamic
visual speech cues, an emerging interest in speech, and the redundancy of audiovisual speech.
Thus, younger infants are not interested in speech so they focus on the eyes, whereas older
infants become interested in speech, shifting their focus to the mouth, but initially at 8 m, this
shift requires that speech be multisensory.
Note

The Fifth Annual Graduate Research Day was organized by Florida Atlantic University’s Graduate Student Association. Graduate students from FAU Colleges present abstracts of original research and posters in a competition for monetary prizes, awards, and recognition

Language
Type
Genre
Extent
1 p.
Identifier
FA00005857
Additional Information
The Fifth Annual Graduate Research Day was organized by Florida Atlantic University’s Graduate Student Association. Graduate students from FAU Colleges present abstracts of original research and posters in a competition for monetary prizes, awards, and recognition
FAU Student Research Digital Collection
Date Backup
2014
Date Created Backup
2014
Date Text
2014
Date Created (EDTF)
2014
Date Issued (EDTF)
2014
Extension


FAU

IID
FA00005857
Organizations
Attributed name: Graduate College
Person Preferred Name

Tift, Amy H.
Physical Description

application/pdf
1 p.
Title Plain
Mouth Motion and Growing Interest in Speech Drives the Developmental Shift in Infant Attention to the Mouth of a Talking Face
Use and Reproduction
Copyright © is held by the author with permission granted to Florida Atlantic University to digitize, archive and distribute this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
Origin Information

2014
2014
Florida Atlantic University

Boca Raton, Fla.

Physical Location
Florida Atlantic University Libraries
Place

Boca Raton, Fla.
Sub Location
Digital Library
Title
Mouth Motion and Growing Interest in Speech Drives the Developmental Shift in Infant Attention to the Mouth of a Talking Face
Other Title Info

Mouth Motion and Growing Interest in Speech Drives the Developmental Shift in Infant Attention to the Mouth of a Talking Face