PLoS ONE (Jan 2007)

Four-day-old human neonates look longer at non-biological motions of a single point-of-light.

  • David Méary,
  • Elenitsa Kitromilides,
  • Karine Mazens,
  • Christian Graff,
  • Edouard Gentaz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000186
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
p. e186

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: Biological motions, that is, the movements of humans and other vertebrates, are characterized by dynamic regularities that reflect the structure and the control schemes of the musculo-skeletal system. Early studies on the development of the visual perception of biological motion showed that infants after three months of age distinguished between biological and non-biological locomotion. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using single point-light motions that varied with respect to the "two-third-power law" of motion generation and perception, we observed that four-day-old human neonates looked longer at non-biological motions than at biological motions when these were simultaneously presented in a standard preferential looking paradigm. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: This result can be interpreted within the "violation of expectation" framework and can indicate that neonates' motion perception - like adults'-is attuned to biological kinematics.