Data in Brief (Oct 2017)

Reactive and anticipatory looking in 6-month-old infants during a visual expectation paradigm

  • Jeffry Quan,
  • Jean-François Bureau,
  • Adam B. Abdul Malik,
  • Johnny Wong,
  • Anne Rifkin-Graboi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2017.08.049
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. C
pp. 713 – 719

Abstract

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This article presents data from 278 six-month-old infants who completed a visual expectation paradigm in which audiovisual stimuli were first presented randomly (random phase), and then in a spatial pattern (pattern phase). Infants’ eye gaze behaviour was tracked with a 60 Hz Tobii eye-tracker in order to measure two types of looking behaviour: reactive looking (i.e., latency to shift eye gaze in reaction to the appearance of stimuli) and anticipatory looking (i.e., percentage of time spent looking at the location where the next stimulus is about to appear during the inter-stimulus interval). Data pertaining to missing data and task order effects are presented. Further analyses show that infants’ reactive looking was faster in the pattern phase, compared to the random phase, and their anticipatory looking increased from random to pattern phases. Within the pattern phase, infants’ reactive looking showed a quadratic trend, with reactive looking time latencies peaking in the middle portion of the phase. Similarly, within the pattern phase, infants’ anticipatory looking also showed a quadratic trend, with anticipatory looking peaking during the middle portion of the phase.