AbstractStochastic transitivity (ST) is a property of preferences among pairs of objects formed from three alternatives, a, b, and c. In general, ST states that if a is preferred to b, and b is preferred to c, then a will be preferred to c. Stochastic transitivity can be weak, moderate, strong or strict (see text). In the present paper, we analyse the presence and degree of ST in the data from two experiments concerning 12-week-old infants’ spontaneous color preferences. In the first experiment (Triads), we tested five sets of three stimuli in pairs of two (a vs. b, b vs. c, a vs. c). In each case two stimuli were chromatic and one was White. Strict ST was seen in all cases. In Experiment 2 (Complementaries), we tested White against pairs o...
AbstractFour-week-olds, 9-week-olds, and adult subjects were tested with low spatial frequency sinus...
In human infants trichromatic vision is functional within the first few months of life. Infants also...
Preferences have a profound impact on our behavior; however, relatively little is known about how pr...
AbstractInfants show spontaneous looking preferences among isoluminant chromatic stimuli [Adams, R. ...
Infants respond categorically to color. However, the nature of infants' categorical responding to co...
Adults commonly prefer blues most and greenish yellows least, but these hue preferences interact wit...
Young infants typically orient to a moving object, but the strength of this tendency depends on what...
AbstractIn our previous demonstrations of chromatic discrimination in infants, we have used test and...
Bornstein, Kessen, and Weiskopf (1976) reported that pre-linguistic infants perceive colour categori...
AbstractInfant color vision is poor, and most psychophysical experiments agree that infant color vis...
This study addressed the issue of whether the visual encoding of simple colored stimuli by three mon...
Groups of newborn human infants (N 180) were habituated to large 167 achromatic (‘‘white’’) lights ...
AbstractIn order to investigate the development of temporal contrast sensitivity functions (tCSFs) f...
The origin of color categories is under debate. Some researchers argue that color categories are lin...
AbstractDespite the development of experimental methods capable of measuring early human color visio...
AbstractFour-week-olds, 9-week-olds, and adult subjects were tested with low spatial frequency sinus...
In human infants trichromatic vision is functional within the first few months of life. Infants also...
Preferences have a profound impact on our behavior; however, relatively little is known about how pr...
AbstractInfants show spontaneous looking preferences among isoluminant chromatic stimuli [Adams, R. ...
Infants respond categorically to color. However, the nature of infants' categorical responding to co...
Adults commonly prefer blues most and greenish yellows least, but these hue preferences interact wit...
Young infants typically orient to a moving object, but the strength of this tendency depends on what...
AbstractIn our previous demonstrations of chromatic discrimination in infants, we have used test and...
Bornstein, Kessen, and Weiskopf (1976) reported that pre-linguistic infants perceive colour categori...
AbstractInfant color vision is poor, and most psychophysical experiments agree that infant color vis...
This study addressed the issue of whether the visual encoding of simple colored stimuli by three mon...
Groups of newborn human infants (N 180) were habituated to large 167 achromatic (‘‘white’’) lights ...
AbstractIn order to investigate the development of temporal contrast sensitivity functions (tCSFs) f...
The origin of color categories is under debate. Some researchers argue that color categories are lin...
AbstractDespite the development of experimental methods capable of measuring early human color visio...
AbstractFour-week-olds, 9-week-olds, and adult subjects were tested with low spatial frequency sinus...
In human infants trichromatic vision is functional within the first few months of life. Infants also...
Preferences have a profound impact on our behavior; however, relatively little is known about how pr...