Abstract

Infants increasingly gaze at the mouth of talking faces during the latter half of the first postnatal year. This study investigated mouth-looking behavior of 120 full-term infants and toddlers (6 months–3 years) and 12 young adults (21–24 years) from Japanese monolingual families. The purpose of the study included: (1) Is such an attentional shift to the mouth in infancy similarly observed in Japanese environment where contribution of visual speech is known to be relatively weak? (2) Can noisy conditions increase mouth-looking behavior of Japanese young children? (3) Is the mouth-looking behavior related to language acquisition? To this end, movies of a talker speaking short phrases were presented while manipulating signal-to-noise ratio (SNR: Clear, SN+4, and SN-4). Expressive vocabulary of toddlers was obtained through their parents. The results indicated that Japanese infants initially have a strong preference for the eyes to mouth which is weakened toward 10 months, but the shift was later and in a milder fashion compared to known results for English-learning infants. Even after 10 months, no clear-cut preference for the mouth was observed even in linguistically challenging situations with strong noise until 3 years of age. In the Clear condition, there was a return of the gaze to the eyes as early as 3 years of age, where they showed increasing attention to the mouth with increasing noise level. In addition, multiple regression analyses revealed a tendency that 2- and 3-year-olds with larger vocabulary increasingly look at the eyes. Overall, the gaze of Japanese-learning infants and toddlers was more biased to the eyes in various aspects compared to known results of English-learning infants. The present findings shed new light on our understanding of the development of selective attention to the mouth in non-western populations.

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