2023
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/sfb4z
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No evidence for familiarity preferences after partial exposure to visual concepts in preschoolers and infants

Abstract: From birth, humans make decisions about what to look at and for how long. A classic framework proposes encoding as a key driver of looking behavior in development - in early stages of encoding, infants and young children prefer to engage with familiar stimuli, while at later stages of encoding they prefer novel stimuli. Though this framework is often invoked when interpreting looking time studies, it is rarely validated empirically. Here, we test these predictions by explicitly manipulating exposure durations … Show more

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