Paukner Annika, Simpson Elizabeth A, Ferrari Pier F, Mrozek Timothy, Suomi Stephen J
Laboratory of Comparative Ethology, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, Poolesville, MD, USA.
Dev Sci. 2014 Nov;17(6):833-40. doi: 10.1111/desc.12207. Epub 2014 Jul 4.
In human infants, neonatal imitation and preferences for eyes are both associated with later social and communicative skills, yet the relationship between these abilities remains unexplored. Here we investigated whether neonatal imitation predicts facial viewing patterns in infant rhesus macaques. We first assessed infant macaques for lipsmacking (a core affiliative gesture) and tongue protrusion imitation in the first week of life. When infants were 10-28 days old, we presented them with an animated macaque avatar displaying a still face followed by lipsmacking or tongue protrusion movements. Using eye tracking technology, we found that macaque infants generally looked equally at the eyes and mouth during gesture presentation, but only lipsmacking-imitators showed significantly more looking at the eyes of the neutral still face. These results suggest that neonatal imitation performance may be an early measure of social attention biases and might potentially facilitate the identification of infants at risk for atypical social development.
在人类婴儿中,新生儿模仿和对眼睛的偏好都与后期的社交和沟通技能有关,但这些能力之间的关系仍未得到探索。在这里,我们研究了新生儿模仿是否能预测恒河猴幼崽的面部注视模式。我们首先在恒河猴幼崽出生后的第一周评估它们的咂唇(一种核心的亲和手势)和伸舌模仿能力。当幼崽10 - 28天大时,我们向它们展示一个动画猕猴头像,先是静止的脸,然后是咂唇或伸舌动作。使用眼动追踪技术,我们发现猕猴幼崽在手势展示过程中通常对眼睛和嘴巴的注视程度相同,但只有咂唇模仿者在中性静止脸出现时对眼睛的注视明显更多。这些结果表明,新生儿模仿表现可能是社交注意力偏向的早期指标,并且可能有助于识别有非典型社交发展风险的婴儿。