Visual categorization is a human core cognitive capacity1,2 that depends on the development of visual category representations in the infant brain.3,4,5,6,7 However, the exact nature of infant visual category representations and their relationship to the corresponding adult form remains unknown.8 Our results clarify the nature of visual category representations from electroencephalography (EEG) data in 6- to 8-month-old infants and their developmental trajectory toward adult maturity in the key characteristics of temporal dynamics,2,9 representational format,10,11,12 and spectral properties.13,14 Temporal dynamics change from slowly emerging, developing representations in infants to quickly emerging, complex representations in adults. Despi...
How do infants’ emerging language abilities impact on their organization of objects into categories?...
For infants it is crucial to differentiate conspecifics from other animates in order to profoundly l...
Recency effects are well documented in the adult and infant literature: recognition and recall memor...
Forming categories is a core part of human cognition, allowing us to make quickly make inferences ab...
Humans make sense of the world by organizing things into categories. When and how does this process ...
Is information from vision and audition mutually facilitative to categorization in infants? Ten-mo...
In this review I address the question why relatively little is currently known about the neural base...
We measured looking times and ERPs to examine the cognitive and brain bases of perceptual category l...
How much of the structure of the human mind and brain is already specified at birth, and how much ar...
The human brain has a remarkable ability to organise knowledge into a structured system. Categorisat...
Building object representations is crucial for understanding the visual world, but it is not yet und...
In human infants trichromatic vision is functional within the first few months of life. Infants also...
While brain imaging studies of visual cognition have contributed extensively to our understanding o...
Investigating learning mechanisms in infancy relies largely on behavioural measures like visual atte...
Visual categorisation has a pervasive role in human perception and cognition and understanding the d...
How do infants’ emerging language abilities impact on their organization of objects into categories?...
For infants it is crucial to differentiate conspecifics from other animates in order to profoundly l...
Recency effects are well documented in the adult and infant literature: recognition and recall memor...
Forming categories is a core part of human cognition, allowing us to make quickly make inferences ab...
Humans make sense of the world by organizing things into categories. When and how does this process ...
Is information from vision and audition mutually facilitative to categorization in infants? Ten-mo...
In this review I address the question why relatively little is currently known about the neural base...
We measured looking times and ERPs to examine the cognitive and brain bases of perceptual category l...
How much of the structure of the human mind and brain is already specified at birth, and how much ar...
The human brain has a remarkable ability to organise knowledge into a structured system. Categorisat...
Building object representations is crucial for understanding the visual world, but it is not yet und...
In human infants trichromatic vision is functional within the first few months of life. Infants also...
While brain imaging studies of visual cognition have contributed extensively to our understanding o...
Investigating learning mechanisms in infancy relies largely on behavioural measures like visual atte...
Visual categorisation has a pervasive role in human perception and cognition and understanding the d...
How do infants’ emerging language abilities impact on their organization of objects into categories?...
For infants it is crucial to differentiate conspecifics from other animates in order to profoundly l...
Recency effects are well documented in the adult and infant literature: recognition and recall memor...