Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
918338 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2012 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

The goal of this study was to evaluate the claim that young children display preferences for auditory stimuli over visual stimuli. This study was motivated by concerns that the visual stimuli employed in prior studies were considerably more complex and less distinctive than the competing auditory stimuli, resulting in an illusory preference for auditory cues. Across three experiments, preschool-age children and adults were trained to use paired audio–visual cues to predict the location of a target. At test, the cues were switched so that auditory cues indicated one location and visual cues indicated the opposite location. In contrast to prior studies, preschool-age children did not exhibit auditory dominance. Instead, children and adults flexibly shifted their preferences as a function of the degree of contrast within each modality, with high contrast leading to greater use.

► We presented children with conflicting cross-modal cues. ► In contrast to prior studies, children were not “auditory dominant.” ► Induction models must account for both perceptual structure and intuitive theories.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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