“…Infant girls may also show greater responsiveness to social stimuli, such as the maternal face, sound, or touch. For example, compared to males, female newborns score higher in global ratings of cuddliness (Benenson et al, 1999), show more orientation to a face or voice (Connellan, Baron-Cohen, Wheelwright, Batki, & Ahluwalia, 2000;Osofsky & O'Connell, 1977), and, like older infant girls (Mundy et al, 2007), exhibit longer eye contact with an experimenter (Hittelman & Dickes, 1979). Sex differences in the incentive value of social stimuli are also consistent with findings that infant girls show stronger visual preferences for a doll (i.e., an object with human attributes) than for a toy truck (Alexander, Wilcox, & Woods, 2009) than infant boys.…”