Clarkson M G, Clifton R K, Morrongiello B A
J Exp Child Psychol. 1985 Feb;39(1):20-36. doi: 10.1016/0022-0965(85)90027-x.
Two experiments assessed the importance of sound duration for eliciting head orientation responses from newborn infants. In Experiment 1, thirty infants turned with equal frequency toward 20-s continuous rattle sounds and 20-s trains of rattle segments. The duration of the rattle segments--14 and 100 ms (2/s), or 500 ms (1/s)--did not influence the likelihood of turning. Response latencies and durations proved quite similar for all stimuli. In Experiment 2, twenty-four infants heard continuous rattle sounds of four different durations: 1, 5, 10, and 20 s. They turned reliably to all stimulus durations; furthermore, the magnitude and temporal characteristics of head orientation responses did not differ for the four stimulus durations. These results suggest that the newborn's head orientation response may reflect a motor program that is initiated by auditory input and then executed in a similar fashion regardless of further stimulation.
两项实验评估了声音时长对引发新生儿头部定向反应的重要性。在实验1中,30名婴儿以相同频率转向20秒的连续拨浪鼓声和20秒的拨浪鼓片段序列。拨浪鼓片段的时长——14毫秒和100毫秒(每秒2次),或500毫秒(每秒1次)——并不影响转向的可能性。所有刺激的反应潜伏期和时长都非常相似。在实验2中,24名婴儿听到了四种不同时长的连续拨浪鼓声:1秒、5秒、10秒和20秒。他们对所有刺激时长都有可靠的转向反应;此外,四种刺激时长下头部定向反应的幅度和时间特征并无差异。这些结果表明,新生儿的头部定向反应可能反映了一种运动程序,该程序由听觉输入启动,然后无论进一步的刺激如何,都以类似方式执行。