Janet E. Frick, John Colombo, and Terrill F. Saxon
ABSTRACT
The current study investigated whether individual and developmental
differences in look duration are correlated with the latency for infants
to disengage fixation from a visual stimulus. Ninety-four infants (52 3-month-olds,
42 4-month-olds) were tested in a procedure that measured ocular reaction
time to shift fixation from a central target to a peripheral target under
conditions in which the central target either remained present ("competition"
condition) or was removed from the display ("non-competition" condition).
Look duration was correlated with disengagement latency; longer-looking
infants were slower than shorter-looking infants to shift fixation to the
peripheral target on competition trials, but not non-competition trials.
Results were similar for 3- and 4-month-olds, although 3-month-olds showed
slower latencies on all trials. Further, long-looking infants were not
consistently slower, but rather showed greater variability in their response
latencies under conditions which required disengagement of fixation. The
results support the position that developmental and individual differences
in look duration are linked to the development of the neural attentional
systems that control the ability to disengage, or inhibit, visual fixation.