“…During the 1st year of life, infants are dominantly exposed to human faces in comparison to other stimuli in their environment (Fausey et al, 2016 ; Jayaraman and Smith, 2018 ), and research has demonstrated infants' early sensitivity to visual speech (e.g., Kuhl and Meltzoff, 1984 ; Patterson and Werker, 1999 ; Lewkowicz and Hansen-Tift, 2012 ; Tomalski et al, 2013 ; Morin-Lessard et al, 2019 ; Pejovic et al, 2019 ). Such early sensitivity to visual speech has been proved important in infants' language development, namely, in language discrimination abilities (Weikum et al, 2007 ; Sebastián-Gallés et al, 2012 ), learning of phonemic contrasts (Teinonen et al, 2008 ), processing of stress (Cruz et al, 2020 ), and processing of familiar words (Weatherhead and White, 2017 ). When processing faces, infants dominantly attend to the eyes and the mouth of a speaker (e.g., Hunnius and Geuze, 2004 ).…”