Selective action prediction in infancy depending on linguistic cues: an EEG and Eyetracker study.


Journal

The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
ISSN: 1529-2401
Titre abrégé: J Neurosci
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 8102140

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
28 Feb 2024
Historique:
received: 12 07 2023
revised: 10 02 2024
accepted: 14 02 2024
medline: 29 2 2024
pubmed: 29 2 2024
entrez: 28 2 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Humans' capacity to predict actions and to socially categorize individuals are at the basis of social cognition. Such capacities emerge in early infancy. By 6 months of age infants predict others' reaching actions considering others' epistemic state. At a similar age, infants are biased to attend to and interact with more familiar individuals, considering adult-like social categories such as the language people speak. We report that these two core processes are interrelated early on in infancy. In a belief-based action prediction task, 6-month-old infants (males and females) presented with a native speaker generated online predictions about the agent's actions, as revealed by the activation of participants' sensorimotor areas before the agent's movement. However, infants who were presented with a foreign speaker did not recruit their motor system before the agent's action. Eye-tracker analysis provided further evidence that linguistic group familiarity influences how infants predict others' actions, as only infants presented with a native speaker modified their attention to the stimuli as a function of the agent's forthcoming behavior. The current findings suggest that infants' emerging capacity to predict others' actions is modulated by social cues, such as others' linguistic group. A facilitation to predict and encode the actions of native speakers relative to foreign speakers may explain, in part, why infants preferentially attend to, imitate, and learn from the actions of native speakers.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38418219
pii: JNEUROSCI.1301-23.2024
doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1301-23.2024
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2024 the authors.

Auteurs

Colomer M (C)

Center for Brain and Cognition (CBC), Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain (08018) marc.colomer.ca@gmail.com.
Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA (60637).

Zacharaki K (Z)

Center for Brain and Cognition (CBC), Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain (08018).

Sebastian-Galles N (SG)

Center for Brain and Cognition (CBC), Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain (08018).

Classifications MeSH