Abstract
AbstractDuring infant development, intersensory facilitation declines gradually as unisensory perception improves. However, this developmental trade-off has been mainly investigated using audiovisual stimulations. Here, fifty 4- to 12-month-old infants were tested to determine whether the facilitating effect of their mother’s body odor on neural face categorization, as previously observed at 4 months, decreases with age. In a baseline odor context, results revealed a face-selective electroencephalographic (EEG) response that increases and changes qualitatively between 4 and 12 months, marking improved face categorization. At the same time, the benefit of adding maternal odor fades gradually with age, indicating an inverse relation with the strength of the sole visual response, and generalizing to olfactory-visual interactions previous evidence from the audiovisual domain.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory