International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory speech information on 12-month-olds' gaze behavior to silently talking faces. We examined German infants' face-scanning behavior to side-by-side presentation of a bilingual speaker's face silently talking German utterances on one side and French on the other side, before and after auditory familiarization with one of the two languages. The results showed that 12-month-old infants showed no general visual preference for either of the visual speeches, neither before nor after auditory input. But, infants who heard native speech decreased their looking time to the mouth area and focused longer on the eyes compared to their scanning behavior without...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory spe...
International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory spe...
International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory spe...
International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory spe...
The present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory speech information on 12-...
International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory spe...
Faces capture and maintain infants' attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study add...
Young infants are capable of integrating auditory and visual information and their speech perception...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants' attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory spe...
International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory spe...
International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory spe...
International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory spe...
The present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory speech information on 12-...
International audienceThe present eye-tracking study aimed to investigate the impact of auditory spe...
Faces capture and maintain infants' attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study add...
Young infants are capable of integrating auditory and visual information and their speech perception...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants' attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...
Faces capture and maintain infants’ attention more than other visual stimuli. The present study addr...