Experimenter Affective Expression and Gaze Following in 7-Month-Olds

Infancy. 2005 Mar;7(2):207-218. doi: 10.1207/s15327078in0702_5. Epub 2005 Mar 1.

Abstract

The study of gaze following in infants younger than 12 months of age has emphasized the effects of gesture, type of target, and its position or placement. This experiment extends this literature by examining the effects of adults' affective expression on 7-month-olds' gaze following. The effects of 3 affective expressions-happy, sad, and neutral-on 7-month-olds' frequency of gaze following were examined. The results indicated that infants more frequently followed the gaze of an adult posing a neutral expression than that of an adult posing either a happy or a sad expression. The infants also looked proportionately longer toward the indicated target when the adult's expression was neutral. The results are interpreted in terms of infants' flexibility of attention.