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Karen Dobkins Development of Motion Processing in Human Infants Karen Dobkins Psychology Department UC San Diego
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Direction: Leftward or Rightward? MOTION PROCESSING in ADULTS
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Directional (Left vs. Right) Eye Movement Measure
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Eye Movement Direction: Leftward or Rightward?
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What about higher-level motion processing?….. Motion Integration
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Plaid Patterns Low-LevelHigher-Level
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Oops, there is a problem with this stimulus
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A Better Stimulus
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Integration Stimulus
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Directional (Left vs. Right) Eye Movement Measure Percent Correct: 50% - 100%
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Infants: 2-month-olds (n = 9) 3-month-olds (n = 12) 4-month-olds (n = 12) 5-month-olds (n = 9) Subjects Adults: n = 6
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Example Data (2 month old) Percent Correct (%) Eye Movement Reliability (EMR) EMR 30 trials Integration 30 trials
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Performance vs. Age Percent Correct (%) Adults ** * Integration Stimulus:Linear Regression, Effect of Age: p < 0.025 ** p < 0.005 * p < 0.05 20 /sec 2 /sec
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Control Stimulus 2 /sec
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Control Stimulus
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“Integration Effect” = Integration - Control ** p < 0.005 Integration Effect (%) Adults ** 2) Motion integration across space decreases with age, p < 0.005 Adults (P) 2) Motion integration across space decreases with age, p < 0.005 1) Infants as young as 2 months integrate component motion into coherent pattern motion (suggests maturity of higher level motion areas)
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Shrinking Motion Summation Fields with Age Coherent Pattern Motion Shrinking Receptive Fields Sizes with Age
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Barber Pole Experiments Perceived Direction 1D motion (interior) 2D motion (terminators) ….. Integration of 1D and 2D motion
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Barber Pole Stimuli Control Stimulus (integration study)Barber Pole (Vertical Aps)Barber Pole (Horizontal Aps) Barber Pole Effect = Horizontal Aps - Vertical Aps (for Leftward vs. Rightward Eye Movement Discrimination) Perceived Direction Mostly Vertical Perceived Direction Mostly Horizontal
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Yes, infant motion processing is influenced by 2D line terminator motion! With clever exp design and a lot of math, we can estimate the “effective shift”…. = 15 - 20 degrees
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Barber Diamond: Effects of Context Duncan, Albright & Stoner, 2000 Intrinsic (Real) Terminators Extrinsic (Accidental) Terminators
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Projects in Developmental Origins of Autism
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Social/Emotional/Communicative Deficits in Autism Lack of interest in social interactions Deficits in Communication (Language & Gestures) Repetitive behaviors/ Obsessive interests Reduced orienting to faces and voices Difficulty understanding the intentions of others Visual Perceptual “Differences”
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EMBEDDED FIGURE TASK
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FACES MOTION Visual Perceptual “Differences”
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And WHEN? In what part(s) of the brain do the problems in Autism originate? BRAIN AREAS Visual cortex HIGHER-LEVEL COGNITIVE FUNCTIONS MAGNO PARVO MOTION FACES
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- SOCIAL/EMOTIONAL/COMMUNICATIVE deficits are apparent by 12 months! (Retrospective studies of videotapes) -VISUAL PERCEPTUAL abnormalities might be apparent at an even earlier time point in development!
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Can we find evidence for visual (and other) abnormalities in the FIRST YEAR of life? OUR RESEARCH QUESTION: OUR APPROACH: Infant Siblings of Children with Autism (“At-Risk” Infants): ~10% risk for Autism …. vs. 0.5% in general population
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Method: At-Risk and Typical Infants tested longitudinally from ages 6 - 36 months 1) Magno/Parvo Vision Test (6 months) 2) Face Processing Test (10 months) 3) Emotional/Social Behaviors (18 months) Autism Testing (24 and 36 months) 4) Language and Cognitive Processing (6 - 36 months) 1) Magno/Parvo Vision Test (6 months)
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Red/Green (PARVO) Light/Dark (MAGNO)
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Measuring Red/Geen (PARVO) and Light/Dark (MAGNO) Sensitivity in Pre-Verbal Infants
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Forced-Choice Preferential Looking 6-month old infants
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Sensitivity
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Thank you Ione Fine Linday Lewis Joe McCleery
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Performance vs. Age ** p < 0.005 * p < 0.05 Percent Correct (%) Adults ** * * * * Integration Stimulus:Linear Regression, Effect of Age: p < 0.025 Control Stimulus: Linear Regression, Effect of Age: p = 0.27 (NS)
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Quadratic Regression: Effect of Age, p < 0.005
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Effect of Aperture Size in Adults Stimulus Condition: 2 by 4 , 80% (infants) Integration Effect: -9.3% (p = 0.15, NS) 1 by 2 , 80% contrast -10.1% (p = 0.27, NS)
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Stimulus-dependent changes in size of motion summation fields e.g., Adults: at HIGH contrasts, motion integration across space is WEAKER (e.g., Lorenceau & Shiffrar, 1992) i.e., smaller motion summation fields “Effective” contrast increases with age No Integration Effect in Adults (from 5% to 80% contrast)
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Integration Stimulus Integration Stimulus + Blur (from Refractive Error) This is for Jeff Mulligan
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Motion integration across space decreases with age….. a million possibilities 1) Decreasing size of motion summation fields 2) Changes in stimulus conditions yielding optimal motion integration, or optimal motion integration across space 3) Changes in relative contribution of cortical vs. subcortical mechanisms involved in eye movements
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Measuring Perceived Angular Shift (between Horizontal and Vertical Apertures) Equivalent Direction (EqDIR): The angle of gratings moving within horizontal apertures required to yield the same horizontalness as produced by gratings moving within vertical apertures at an angle of X degrees. “Effective” Angular Shift = EqDIR - X Horizontalness: Leftward vs. Rightward Eye Movement Direction Discrimination Performance X = 45 degrees
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