“…Infants of all ages continued to make saccades first to the salient distractors; they did not completely inhibit or ignore the distractors, but rather modified the distribution of their attention. This is consistent with other findings that attention holding decreases across prolonged experience with complex stimuli, while attention getting remains relatively stable (Althaus & Mareschal, ; Cohen, DeLoache, & Rissman, ; Richard, Normandeau, Brun, & Maillet, ; Slater, Rose, & Morison, ). Using visual saliency maps to examine infants' looking behavior during category learning, Althaus and Mareschal () found that eye movements in both 4‐ and 12‐month‐olds were driven by low‐level salience characteristics in the early stages of familiarization.…”