Head, eye, mouth and crying responses were recorded in one-six day old neonates in an experimental (N = 36) and in a control condition (N = 12). In the experimental con-dition, the babies were sitting in a chair surrounded by a uniform white curtain and exposed to playback of a male voice transmitted successively through three loud-speakers at the left, the right or in front of the chair, according to a factorial design. In the control condition, there was no voice. The voice enhanced head movements, opening of the eyes, mouthing and crying and it influenced hand-sucking. The babies' head behavior can be described as positive orientation since first head movements after the voice had started to talk were most frequently given in the directi...
The infant cry was shown to be a communicative signal consisting of multimodal behaviors that are us...
Infant vocalization plays a pivotal role in communicating infant mood to parents and thereby motivat...
Faces convey primal information for our social life. This information is so primal that we sometimes...
Within the first day after birth, infants develop the tendency to respond to human voices with enhan...
Groups of 4-day-old neonates were tested for dichotic discrimination and ear differences with the Hi...
The ability to decode facial expressions is an important component of social interaction and functio...
Four experiments are described which investigated the role of the mother’s voice in facilitating rec...
<div><p>The present study examined whether 6-month-old infants could transfer amodal information (i....
The present study examined whether 6-month-old infants could transfer amodal information (i.e. indep...
Two experiments were conducted to test whether newborns could discriminate between their own cry and...
Pain behavior of neonates was compared across sleep/waking states and sex. From Gate-Control Theory ...
In their first weeks of life preterm infants are deprived of developmentally appropriate stimuli, in...
This study seeks to determine whether newborns are sensitive to an operant-condi-tioning task involv...
Although evidence is available about preterm newborns’ spontaneous behavioral repertoire during the ...
Pain expression in neonates instigated by heel-lance for blood sampling purposes was systematically ...
The infant cry was shown to be a communicative signal consisting of multimodal behaviors that are us...
Infant vocalization plays a pivotal role in communicating infant mood to parents and thereby motivat...
Faces convey primal information for our social life. This information is so primal that we sometimes...
Within the first day after birth, infants develop the tendency to respond to human voices with enhan...
Groups of 4-day-old neonates were tested for dichotic discrimination and ear differences with the Hi...
The ability to decode facial expressions is an important component of social interaction and functio...
Four experiments are described which investigated the role of the mother’s voice in facilitating rec...
<div><p>The present study examined whether 6-month-old infants could transfer amodal information (i....
The present study examined whether 6-month-old infants could transfer amodal information (i.e. indep...
Two experiments were conducted to test whether newborns could discriminate between their own cry and...
Pain behavior of neonates was compared across sleep/waking states and sex. From Gate-Control Theory ...
In their first weeks of life preterm infants are deprived of developmentally appropriate stimuli, in...
This study seeks to determine whether newborns are sensitive to an operant-condi-tioning task involv...
Although evidence is available about preterm newborns’ spontaneous behavioral repertoire during the ...
Pain expression in neonates instigated by heel-lance for blood sampling purposes was systematically ...
The infant cry was shown to be a communicative signal consisting of multimodal behaviors that are us...
Infant vocalization plays a pivotal role in communicating infant mood to parents and thereby motivat...
Faces convey primal information for our social life. This information is so primal that we sometimes...