“…Given that 6 months of age is also the stage where infants’ endogenous control starts to emerge [ 68 , 69 ], this would allow them to exert top-down control to specific subparts of a speaker’s face and voluntarily deploy more of their attention into the speaker’s mouth. Indeed, the onset of this mouth preference has been confirmed to emerge at around 6–8 months of age by more recent studies [ 44 , 45 , 46 , 47 , 70 , 71 , 72 , 73 ] and seems to present its peak at around 18 months of age [ 46 , 74 ]. This disposition to look toward speakers’ mouths remains present in the second year [ 75 , 76 ] and slowly diminishes during later childhood, with 5-year-old children typically showing balanced attention between the talker’s eyes and mouth when perceiving native speech [ 46 , 77 , 78 ].…”