Three-year-olds’ memory for a person met only once at the age of 12months: Very long-term memory revealed by a late-manifesting novelty preference

Male Memory, Long-Term Time Factors Eye Movements 05 social sciences Recognition, Psychology Child Development Child, Preschool Humans Female 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Eye Movement Measurements
DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2013.12.011 Publication Date: 2014-01-10T08:03:37Z
ABSTRACT
This study examined three-year-olds' verbal and non-verbal memory for a person met only once after a 28 month interval. Children in the Test group (N=50) had participated in an earlier experiment at our lab at the age of 12 months where they met one of two possible experimenters. At this past event half of the children were tested by one, the other half by the other experimenter. At the follow-up, run by a naïve experimenter, the children were shown two videos from the original experiment in a visual paired comparison task: One with the specific experimenter testing them at the original visit (the Target) and one of the other experimenter (the Foil), with whom they had no experience. When explicitly asked, the children's responses did not differ from chance. However, eye-tracking data revealed a late-manifesting novelty preference for the "Foil" person indicating memory for the "Target" person met once before.
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