Rapid detection of snakes modulates spatial orienting in infancy

被引:6
作者
Bertels, Julie [1 ]
Bayard, Clemence [2 ]
Floccia, Caroline [3 ]
Destrebecqz, Arnaud [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Libre Bruxelles, CRCN, ULBabyLab, Consciousness Cognit & Computat Grp CO3, Brussels, Belgium
[2] Grenoble Univ, CNRS, Dept Parole & Cognit, Gipsa Lab, Grenoble, France
[3] Univ Plymouth, Sch Psychol, Plymouth, Devon, England
关键词
attention; cuing paradigm; infancy; snake; threat; FEAR-RELEVANT STIMULI; THREAT DETECTION; EVOLVED MODULE; ATTENTION; ANIMALS; GRASS; INHIBITION; RETURN; PERCEPTION; LOCATIONS;
D O I
10.1177/0165025417693955
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Recent evidence for an evolved fear module in the brain comes from studies showing that adults, children and infants detect evolutionarily threatening stimuli such as snakes faster than non-threatening ones. A decisive argument for a threat detection system efficient early in life would come from data showing, in young infants, a functional threat-detection mechanism in terms of what and where visual pathways. The present study used a variant of Posner's cuing paradigm, adapted to 7-11-month-olds. On each trial, a threat-irrelevant or a threat-relevant cue was presented (a flower or a snake, i.e., what). We measured how fast infants detected these cues and the extent to which they further influenced the spatial allocation of attention (where). In line with previous findings, we observed that infants oriented faster towards snake than flower cues. Importantly, a facilitation effect was found at the cued location for flowers but not for snakes, suggesting that these latter cues elicit a broadening of attention and arguing in favour of sophisticated what-where connections. These results strongly support the claim that humans have an early propensity to detect evolutionarily threat-relevant stimuli.
引用
收藏
页码:381 / 387
页数:7
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