“…When 3- (Bronson, 1991) and 5-month-old infants (Jankowski, Rose, & Feldman, 2001) are familiarized with a static picture, visual recognition for that stimulus is related to short, distributed looking behavior. In contrast, using a video of the well-established puppet imitation task (see also Barr et al, 1996; Barr, Muentener, & Garcia, 2007), Taylor and Herbert (2013) found limited evidence for a relationship between attention during learning, measured using an eye tracker, and visual recognition memory at 6 and 9 months of age. Although imitation studies using the puppet task traditionally involve the experimenter using empty language cues to direct infant’s attention to the target event, the video demonstration in this study was silent, to be consistent with previous eye tracking studies (e.g., Vivanti et al, 2008).…”