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Synesthetic Associations Between Voice and Gestures in Preverbal Infants : Weak Effects and Methodological Concerns

Anikin, Andrey LU orcid ; Rudling, Maja LU orcid ; Persson, Tomas LU orcid and Gärdenfors, Peter LU (2018)
Abstract
Adult humans spontaneously associate visual features, such as size and direction of movement, with phonetic properties like vowel quality and auditory pitch. A number of recent studies have claimed that looking time in preverbal infants reveals the same associations, which would indicate that some cross-modal correspondences are the result of perceptual biases. Here we tested 30 infants of age 7-13 months, who were exposed to pairs of audiovisual stimuli presented first sequentially and then side by side. The stimuli consisted of a visual object (computer-animated ball or filmed human hand) moving sinusoidally, vertically, or in a U-shape and accompanied by a sliding voice-like tone. Sequential presentation revealed no preference for... (More)
Adult humans spontaneously associate visual features, such as size and direction of movement, with phonetic properties like vowel quality and auditory pitch. A number of recent studies have claimed that looking time in preverbal infants reveals the same associations, which would indicate that some cross-modal correspondences are the result of perceptual biases. Here we tested 30 infants of age 7-13 months, who were exposed to pairs of audiovisual stimuli presented first sequentially and then side by side. The stimuli consisted of a visual object (computer-animated ball or filmed human hand) moving sinusoidally, vertically, or in a U-shape and accompanied by a sliding voice-like tone. Sequential presentation revealed no preference for either audiovisual synchrony or synesthetic congruency, while side-by-side presentation revealed a small preference for incongruent stimuli. The effect of congruency was similar for the animated ball and filmed human hand. These findings extend the results of previous research on pitch-motion synesthesia in preverbal infants, which used animations and sliding whistles, to more ecologically relevant stimuli such as voice and gestures. If infants and adults share the same preferences for non-arbitrary mappings between manual gestures and intonation, this could indicate that cross-modal correspondences facilitate language acquisition. On the other hand, a critical survey of the field revealed that previous studies of audiovisual cross-modal correspondences in infants suffer from replication failures due to poor robustness of the reported effect with respect to experimental stimuli and testing procedure. We therefore argue that the research on cross-modal correspondences in infants would profit from using alternative testing methods in addition to preferential looking and call for replication of previously reported congruency effects. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Other contribution
publication status
published
subject
keywords
preferential looking, audiovisual congruency, cross-modal matching, infant, synesthesia
pages
17 pages
publisher
PsyArXiv
DOI
10.31234/osf.io/n2gvz
project
Thinking in Time: Cognition, Communication and Learning
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
957638f9-f67d-48e1-ac9a-3e53116c6009
date added to LUP
2018-12-11 12:46:35
date last changed
2024-01-15 12:49:30
@misc{957638f9-f67d-48e1-ac9a-3e53116c6009,
  abstract     = {{Adult humans spontaneously associate visual features, such as size and direction of movement, with phonetic properties like vowel quality and auditory pitch. A number of recent studies have claimed that looking time in preverbal infants reveals the same associations, which would indicate that some cross-modal correspondences are the result of perceptual biases. Here we tested 30 infants of age 7-13 months, who were exposed to pairs of audiovisual stimuli presented first sequentially and then side by side. The stimuli consisted of a visual object (computer-animated ball or filmed human hand) moving sinusoidally, vertically, or in a U-shape and accompanied by a sliding voice-like tone. Sequential presentation revealed no preference for either audiovisual synchrony or synesthetic congruency, while side-by-side presentation revealed a small preference for incongruent stimuli. The effect of congruency was similar for the animated ball and filmed human hand. These findings extend the results of previous research on pitch-motion synesthesia in preverbal infants, which used animations and sliding whistles, to more ecologically relevant stimuli such as voice and gestures. If infants and adults share the same preferences for non-arbitrary mappings between manual gestures and intonation, this could indicate that cross-modal correspondences facilitate language acquisition. On the other hand, a critical survey of the field revealed that previous studies of audiovisual cross-modal correspondences in infants suffer from replication failures due to poor robustness of the reported effect with respect to experimental stimuli and testing procedure. We therefore argue that the research on cross-modal correspondences in infants would profit from using alternative testing methods in addition to preferential looking and call for replication of previously reported congruency effects.}},
  author       = {{Anikin, Andrey and Rudling, Maja and Persson, Tomas and Gärdenfors, Peter}},
  keywords     = {{preferential looking; audiovisual congruency; cross-modal matching; infant; synesthesia}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{12}},
  publisher    = {{PsyArXiv}},
  title        = {{Synesthetic Associations Between Voice and Gestures in Preverbal Infants : Weak Effects and Methodological Concerns}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/n2gvz}},
  doi          = {{10.31234/osf.io/n2gvz}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}