Abstract
Symmetry has long been viewed as a feature of objects that facilitates ease of perception. Three experiments investigated 4- to 5-month-old infants’ detection and processing of vertical symmetry, oblique symmetry, and asymmetry in novel patterns and faces. In Experiment 1, infants showed the fewest shifts in visual fixations to vertical symmetry in patterns and faces, supporting the view that vertical symmetry is processed more efficiently than oblique symmetry or asymmetry. In Experiment 2, stimulus presentation disallowed more than a single visual fixation, and infants looked longer at a face that is vertically symmetrical compared to obliquely symmetrical or asymmetrical, and they looked equally to patterns regardless of symmetry. In Experiment 3, where pattern exposures were prolonged and inverted faces viewed, infants discriminated vertical symmetry in patterns but lost the advantage with vertical symmetry in faces. Thus, symmetry in patterns requires more processing time from infants, and inverting the face costs infants the normal perceptual advantage of symmetry, even though components of the face remain symmetrical. These findings suggest that infants are prepared to exploit symmetry in their everyday perceptual worlds.
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