Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Infants know what your eyes tell

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Oct, 2014 07:44 AM
    The ability to respond to eye cues develops during infancy - at seven or so months, finds research.
     
    "Our study provides developmental evidence for the notion that humans possess specific brain processes that allow them to automatically respond to eye cues," said study co-author Tobias Grossmann from University of Virginia.
     
    The eye white, or how much of it is shown and at what angle, plays a role in the social and cooperative interactions among humans.
     
    For example, while wide-open eyes exposing a lot of white indicate fear or surprise, a thinner slit of exposed eye such as when smiling expresses happiness or joy.
     
    For the study, the researchers used electroencephalography (EEG) to measure the brain activity of seven-month-old infants while showing images of eyes wide open, narrowly opened, and with direct or averted gazes.
     
    They found that the infants’ brains responded differently depending on the expression suggested by the eyes they viewed.
     
    They viewed the eye images for only 50 milliseconds - which is much less time than needed for an infant of this age to consciously perceive this kind of visual information.
     
    “Like adults, infants are sensitive to eye expressions of fear and direction of focus, and that these responses operate without conscious awareness,” Grossmann pointed out.
     
    “The existence of such brain mechanisms in infants likely provides a vital foundation for the development of social interactive skills in humans,” Grossmann added.
     
    The study appeared online in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    An abusive boss can make entire team hostile

    An abusive boss can make entire team hostile
    Is your boss abusive and does not pay much heed to even positive suggestions made by the team? Such superiors can actually throw the entire...

    An abusive boss can make entire team hostile

    Bored of sex life? Mix love to it

    Bored of sex life? Mix love to it
    The new mantra for women who feel their sex life is boring and bereft of passion: connect love with sex and enhance the pleasure between the sheets....

    Bored of sex life? Mix love to it

    Don't miss meals with kids

    Don't miss meals with kids
    Spending time at home, especially at breakfast and dinner, gives your adolescent kids healthier eating behaviour and even better exercise habits, says new research...

    Don't miss meals with kids

    Is your college going kid more active on weekends?

    Is your college going kid more active on weekends?
    Parents always suspect that their college going kids prefer weekends to weekdays. Now there is proof that college graduates are more active on weekends...

    Is your college going kid more active on weekends?

    How brain can multitask better

    How brain can multitask better
    Cooking while having a conversation, watching a movie while browsing the Web, or driving while listening to a radio show - multitasking is an essential...

    How brain can multitask better

    Never discuss ex-beau, dress code with your man

    Never discuss ex-beau, dress code with your man
    No matter how long you two have been together, when with your man you should never make references to your ex-boyfriend or tell him to open up to you, says an expert....

    Never discuss ex-beau, dress code with your man