Infants from an early age have a bias to attend more to faces than non-faces and after 5 months are particularly attentive to fearful faces. We examined the specificity of this “fear bias” in 5-, 7-, and 12-month-old infants (N = 269) and 36-month-old children (N = 191) and whether its development is associated with features of the early rearing environment, specifically maternal anxiety and depression symptoms. Attention dwell times were assessed by measuring the latencies of gaze shifts from a stimulus at fixation to a new stimulus in the visual periphery. In infancy, dwell times were shorter for non-face control stimuli vs. happy faces at all ages, and happy vs. fearful, but not angry, faces at 7 and 12 months. At 36 months, dwell times ...
An important feature of the development of emotion recognition in infants is the emergence of a robu...
Parent-to-child transmission of information processing biases to threat is a potential causal mechan...
Infants demonstrate an attentional bias toward fearful facial expressions that emerges in the first ...
<div><p>Infants from an early age have a bias to attend more to faces than non-faces and after 5 mon...
Infants from an early age have a bias to attend more to faces than non-faces and after 5 months are ...
Several studies have shown that at 7 months of age, infants display an attentional bias toward fearf...
The present study investigated whether facial expressions modulate visual attention in 7-month-old i...
After 5 months of age, infants begin to prioritize attention to fearful over other facial expression...
Biases in attention towards facial cues during infancy may have an important role in the development...
Most infants exhibit an attentional bias for faces and fearful facial expressions. These biases redu...
International audienceHuman adults show an attentional bias towards fearful faces, an adaptive behav...
An attention bias to threat has been linked to psychosocial outcomes across development, including a...
Adults exhibit enhanced attention to negative emotions like fear, which is thought to be an adaptive...
To investigate the role of early regulatory problems (RP), such as problems in feeding, sleeping, ...
Adult-like attentional biases toward fearful faces can be observed in 7-month-old infants. It is pos...
An important feature of the development of emotion recognition in infants is the emergence of a robu...
Parent-to-child transmission of information processing biases to threat is a potential causal mechan...
Infants demonstrate an attentional bias toward fearful facial expressions that emerges in the first ...
<div><p>Infants from an early age have a bias to attend more to faces than non-faces and after 5 mon...
Infants from an early age have a bias to attend more to faces than non-faces and after 5 months are ...
Several studies have shown that at 7 months of age, infants display an attentional bias toward fearf...
The present study investigated whether facial expressions modulate visual attention in 7-month-old i...
After 5 months of age, infants begin to prioritize attention to fearful over other facial expression...
Biases in attention towards facial cues during infancy may have an important role in the development...
Most infants exhibit an attentional bias for faces and fearful facial expressions. These biases redu...
International audienceHuman adults show an attentional bias towards fearful faces, an adaptive behav...
An attention bias to threat has been linked to psychosocial outcomes across development, including a...
Adults exhibit enhanced attention to negative emotions like fear, which is thought to be an adaptive...
To investigate the role of early regulatory problems (RP), such as problems in feeding, sleeping, ...
Adult-like attentional biases toward fearful faces can be observed in 7-month-old infants. It is pos...
An important feature of the development of emotion recognition in infants is the emergence of a robu...
Parent-to-child transmission of information processing biases to threat is a potential causal mechan...
Infants demonstrate an attentional bias toward fearful facial expressions that emerges in the first ...