Biological Motion Primes the Animate/Inanimate Distinction in Infancy

Male Science Q 05 social sciences R Motion Perception Infant Child Development Medicine Humans Female 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Research Article
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0116910 Publication Date: 2015-02-06T16:32:23Z
ABSTRACT
Given that biological motion is both detected and preferred early in life, we tested the hypothesis that biological motion might be instrumental to infants' differentiation of animate and inanimate categories. Infants were primed with either point-light displays of realistic biological motion, random motion, or schematic biological motion of an unfamiliar shape. After being habituated to these displays, 12-month-old infants categorized animals and vehicles as well as furniture and vehicles with the sequential touching task. The findings indicated that infants primed with point-light displays of realistic biological motion showed better categorization of animates than those exposed to random or schematic biological motion. These results suggest that human biological motion might be one of the motion cues that provide the building blocks for infants' concept of animacy.
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