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      Infant perceptual development for faces and spoken words: An integrated approach

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          Abstract

          There are obvious differences between recognizing faces and recognizing spoken words or phonemes that might suggest development of each capability requires different skills. Recognizing faces and perceiving spoken language, however, are in key senses extremely similar endeavors. Both perceptual processes are based on richly variable, yet highly structured input from which the perceiver needs to extract categorically meaningful information. This similarity could be reflected in the perceptual narrowing that occurs within the first year of life in both domains. We take the position that the perceptual and neurocognitive processes by which face and speech recognition develop are based on a set of common principles. One common principle is the importance of systematic variability in the input as a source of information rather than noise. Experience of this variability leads to perceptual tuning to the critical properties that define individual faces or spoken words versus their membership in larger groupings of people and their language communities. We argue that parallels can be drawn directly between the principles responsible for the development of face and spoken language perception. © 2014 The Authors. Dev Psychobiol Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 56: 1454–1481, 2014.

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            The unique role of the visual word form area in reading.

            Reading systematically activates the left lateral occipitotemporal sulcus, at a site known as the visual word form area (VWFA). This site is reproducible across individuals/scripts, attuned to reading-specific processes, and partially selective for written strings relative to other categories such as line drawings. Lesions affecting the VWFA cause pure alexia, a selective deficit in word recognition. These findings must be reconciled with the fact that human genome evolution cannot have been influenced by such a recent and culturally variable activity as reading. Capitalizing on recent functional magnetic resonance imaging experiments, we provide strong corroborating evidence for the hypothesis that reading acquisition partially recycles a cortical territory evolved for object and face recognition, the prior properties of which influenced the form of writing systems. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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              Statistical learning by 8-month-old infants.

              Learners rely on a combination of experience-independent and experience-dependent mechanisms to extract information from the environment. Language acquisition involves both types of mechanisms, but most theorists emphasize the relative importance of experience-independent mechanisms. The present study shows that a fundamental task of language acquisition, segmentation of words from fluent speech, can be accomplished by 8-month-old infants based solely on the statistical relationships between neighboring speech sounds. Moreover, this word segmentation was based on statistical learning from only 2 minutes of exposure, suggesting that infants have access to a powerful mechanism for the computation of statistical properties of the language input.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Dev Psychobiol
                Dev Psychobiol
                dev
                Developmental Psychobiology
                BlackWell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                0012-1630
                1098-2302
                November 2014
                04 August 2014
                : 56
                : 7
                : 1454-1481
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Social Science and Psychology, University of Western Sydney New South Wales, Australia
                [2 ]MARCS Institute, University of Western Sydney New South Wales, Australia
                [3 ]School of Humanities and Communication Arts, University of Western Sydney New South Wales, Australia
                Author notes
                Correspondence to: Tamara L. Watson, E-mail: t.watson@ 123456uws.edu.au

                “Newborn” in the infant development literature generally refers to the period between birth and up to 6–8 weeks postnatal, as in many ways infants during this period have quite different behavioral, cognitive, and neuropsychological characteristics from those of infants 2 months and older. Many studies of newborn speech perception and listening preferences have focused on the first few minutes, hours, days after birth, but some have included infants between 4 and 6 weeks.

                The * indicates that this is not a real word.

                Multi-sensory perception is here used to mean either simultaneous processing and subsequent matching of stimuli across more than one sense OR processing stimuli in an integrated fashion such that modality of delivery information is almost immaterial to categorization or discrimination performance.

                Indeed the relevant factor in the developmental trajectory of experiential effects on speech perception does appear to be the combined auditory experience during the prenatal and postnatal periods: preterm infants show a decline in discrimination of nonnative consonant contrasts at the same gestational age as full-term infants, rather than at the same postnatal age (Peña, Werker, & Dehaene-Lambertz, 2012).

                Article
                10.1002/dev.21243
                4231232
                25132626
                2ef592fc-8bc9-429f-84a3-6be2cac73c98
                © 2014 The Authors. Dev Psychobiol Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.

                History
                : 20 February 2013
                : 24 June 2014
                Categories
                Review Articles

                Neurology
                infant perceptual development,speech perception,spoken word recognition,face recognition,perceptual narrowing,face space,perceptual assimilation

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