Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4L8, Canada.
Applied Psychology and Human Development, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1V6, Canada.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2024 Aug;244:105942. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2024.105942. Epub 2024 May 3.
To effectively contain the spread of COVID-19, public health agencies mandated special regulations. Although they protected us from COVID-19, these restrictions have inevitably changed the environment around us. It remains unclear how these changes may have affected early cognitive development among infants born during the pandemic. Thus, this study examined how the COVID-19 restrictions have affected infants' face recognition ability, a hallmark of their cognitive capacities. Specifically, we used the familiarization and visual pair comparison paradigm to examine face recognition performance among infants aged 6 to 14 months amid the second wave of the pandemic (February to July 2021). Experiment 1 investigated the recognition of unmasked faces and found that only younger infants, but not older infants, recognized faces by showing a novelty preference. Experiment 2 examined the recognition of faces wearing masks and found that only older infants, but not younger ones, recognized faces by exhibiting a familiarity preference. These results suggest that with limited interactions during the pandemic, infants could have developed an overly specialized face processing ability that failed to recognize the faces of strangers. Moreover, infants could have obtained more information on masked faces during the pandemic and adapted to the current situation. In Expreiment 3, we further confirmed the restriction on infants' interpersonal experiences with a survey conducted both before and during the pandemic. Overall, these findings demonstrated how the pandemic altered early perceptual development and further confirmed that interpersonal experiences during infancy are critical in their cognitive development.
为了有效控制 COVID-19 的传播,公共卫生机构颁布了特殊法规。虽然这些法规使我们免受 COVID-19 的侵害,但它们不可避免地改变了我们周围的环境。目前还不清楚这些变化会如何影响大流行期间出生的婴儿的早期认知发展。因此,本研究探讨了 COVID-19 限制措施如何影响婴儿的面部识别能力,这是他们认知能力的标志。具体来说,我们使用了熟悉和视觉配对比较范式,在大流行的第二波期间(2021 年 2 月至 7 月)检查了 6 至 14 个月大的婴儿的面部识别能力。实验 1 研究了对未戴口罩的面孔的识别,发现只有年龄较小的婴儿,而不是年龄较大的婴儿,通过表现出新奇偏好来识别面孔。实验 2 研究了对面戴口罩的面孔的识别,发现只有年龄较大的婴儿,而不是年龄较小的婴儿,通过表现出熟悉偏好来识别面孔。这些结果表明,由于大流行期间互动有限,婴儿可能已经发展出一种过于专门化的面部处理能力,无法识别陌生人的面孔。此外,婴儿在大流行期间可能从戴口罩的面孔中获得了更多信息,并适应了当前的情况。在实验 3 中,我们通过在大流行前后进行的一项调查进一步证实了对婴儿人际体验的限制。总的来说,这些发现表明大流行如何改变了早期的感知发展,并进一步证实了婴儿期的人际体验对他们的认知发展至关重要。