Stimulation of one sensory modality can induce perceptual experiences in another modality that reflect synaesthetic correspondences among different dimensions of sensory experience. In visual-hearing synaesthesia, for example, higher pitched sounds induce visual images that are brighter, smaller, higher in space, and sharper than those induced by lower pitched sounds. Claims that neonatal perception is synaesthetic imply that such correspondences are an unlearned aspect of perception. To date, the youngest children in whom such correspondences have been confirmed with any certainty were 2- to 3-year-olds. We examined preferential looking to assess 3- to 4-month-old preverbal infants' sensitivity to the correspondences linking auditory pitch...
The ability of 3-month-old infants to learn arbitrary auditory– visual associations between voices a...
How effortlessly and quickly infants acquire their native language remains one of the most intriguin...
Symposium 4B: Infant Visual Perception and Beyond: Motion, Color, Object, and Face Perception, and C...
Adult humans spontaneously associate visual features, such as size and direction of movement, with p...
The popular claim that humans are born in a state of 'buzzing confusion' (James, 1890) can be explai...
Amodal (redundant) and arbitrary cross-sensory feature associations involve the context-insensitive ...
A model of the development of coordinated processing of auditory and visual information is proposed ...
From birth, infants detect associations between the locations of static visual objects and sounds th...
An ability to detect the common location of multisensory stimulation is essential for us to perceive...
AbstractA fundamental question in language development is how infants start to assign meaning to wor...
The perception of speech involves the integration of both heard and seen signals. Increasing evidenc...
Abstract-Previous research has shown that infants as young as 1 month of age are capable of intermod...
Interest in crossmodal correspondences has recently seen a renaissance thanks to numerous studies in...
The mechanisms of how children develop the capacity to make use of speech articulation cues to suppo...
Interest in crossmodal correspondences has recently seen a renaissance thanks to numerous studies in...
The ability of 3-month-old infants to learn arbitrary auditory– visual associations between voices a...
How effortlessly and quickly infants acquire their native language remains one of the most intriguin...
Symposium 4B: Infant Visual Perception and Beyond: Motion, Color, Object, and Face Perception, and C...
Adult humans spontaneously associate visual features, such as size and direction of movement, with p...
The popular claim that humans are born in a state of 'buzzing confusion' (James, 1890) can be explai...
Amodal (redundant) and arbitrary cross-sensory feature associations involve the context-insensitive ...
A model of the development of coordinated processing of auditory and visual information is proposed ...
From birth, infants detect associations between the locations of static visual objects and sounds th...
An ability to detect the common location of multisensory stimulation is essential for us to perceive...
AbstractA fundamental question in language development is how infants start to assign meaning to wor...
The perception of speech involves the integration of both heard and seen signals. Increasing evidenc...
Abstract-Previous research has shown that infants as young as 1 month of age are capable of intermod...
Interest in crossmodal correspondences has recently seen a renaissance thanks to numerous studies in...
The mechanisms of how children develop the capacity to make use of speech articulation cues to suppo...
Interest in crossmodal correspondences has recently seen a renaissance thanks to numerous studies in...
The ability of 3-month-old infants to learn arbitrary auditory– visual associations between voices a...
How effortlessly and quickly infants acquire their native language remains one of the most intriguin...
Symposium 4B: Infant Visual Perception and Beyond: Motion, Color, Object, and Face Perception, and C...