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Featured researches published by Irene Leo.


Progress in Brain Research | 2011

The processing of social stimuli in early infancy: from faces to biological motion perception.

Francesca Simion; Elisa Di Giorgio; Irene Leo; Lara Bardi

There are several lines of evidence which suggests that, since birth, the human system detects social agents on the basis of at least two properties: the presence of a face and the way they move. This chapter reviews the infant research on the origin of brain specialization for social stimuli and on the role of innate mechanisms and perceptual experience in shaping the development of the social brain. Two lines of convergent evidence on face detection and biological motion detection will be presented to demonstrate the innate predispositions of the human system to detect social stimuli at birth. As for face detection, experiments will be presented to demonstrate that, by virtue of nonspecific attentional biases, a very coarse template of faces become active at birth. As for biological motion detection, studies will be presented to demonstrate that, since birth, the human system is able to detect social stimuli on the basis of their properties such as the presence of a semi-rigid motion named biological motion. Overall, the empirical evidence converges in supporting the notion that the human system begins life broadly tuned to detect social stimuli and that the progressive specialization will narrow the system for social stimuli as a function of experience.


Cognition | 2011

Newborns' Preference for Goal-Directed Actions.

Laila Craighero; Irene Leo; Carlo Umiltà; Francesca Simion

The central role of sensory-motor representations in cognitive functions is almost universally accepted. However, determining the link between motor execution and its sensory counterpart and when, during ontogenesis, this link originates are still under investigation. The aim of the present study is to investigate whether at birth this link is already present and 2-day-old newborns are able to discriminate between visual cues indicating goal-directed or non-goal-directed actions. Here, with a preferential looking technique, a hand grasping a ball was the observed movement and we orthogonally manipulated the three factors necessary to successfully reach the goal: (a) presence of the ball, (b) direction of the arm movement, and (c) hand shaping. Results indicated that newborns orient more frequently and look longer at a hand shape for whole hand prehension but only when the movement is directed away from the body and toward the external world. In addition, newborns prefer the away from the body movement only when the object is present. We argue that newborns prefer a movement directed toward the external world only when it may develop into a purposeful movement because of the presence of the to-be-grasped object. Overall, our results support the existence of primitive sensory-motor associations since the first days after birth.


Infancy | 2009

Newborns' mooney-face perception

Irene Leo; Francesca Simion

The aim of this study is to investigate whether newborns detect a face on the basis of a Gestalt representation based on first-order relational information (i.e., the basic arrangement of face features) by using Mooney stimuli. The incomplete 2-tone Mooney stimuli were used because they preclude focusing both on the local features (i.e., the fine details of the individual features) and on the second-order relational information (i.e., the distance between the internal elements); therefore, face detection can rely only on a Gestalt representation of a face. Two experiments were carried out by using a preferential looking procedure. Experiment 1 demonstrated that newborns prefer upright Mooney faces to inverted Mooney faces (180° rotated). Experiment 2 showed that newborns prefer a Mooney face as compared to a Mooney-like object equated for the number of elements in the upper part. Overall, the results indicate that newborns bind and organize the fragmentary parts of the Mooneized face stimulus into a whole and detect the first-order relations of a face on the basis of holistic processing.


Visual Cognition | 2016

Newborns’ attention is driven by the translational movement

Laila Craighero; Marco Lunghi; Irene Leo; Valentina Ghirardi; Francesca Simion

ABSTRACT The present study investigated whether 2-day-old newborns are able to discriminate two translating meaningless Point-Light Displays (PLD) videos, in which the shape of one of them changes compared to that of the other along the trajectory, independently from movement kinematics, and if this ability is present both when stimuli differed at the end or at the beginning of the movement. To manipulate the instant in which along the movement the difference between stimuli was evident, and to maintain every unspecific dissimilarity possibly determining the preference, videos were played in a loop either forward or backwards. In Experiment 1, PLD stimuli moved with natural accelerated-decelerated kinematics; in Experiment 2 they moved at constant velocity. Four groups of newborns were submitted to the preferential looking technique experiments. Results showed that newborns looked longer at natural kinematics and that, irrespective of the type of kinematics, they discriminated the two stimuli only when videos were played forward, that is, only when stimuli differed at the end of the movement. These data suggest that, independently from kinematics, movement translational components induce newborns to allocate attention at the end of the observed movement. Given the strict link between attention and eye movements, we suggest that this effect may bootstrap the system and give rise to proactive gaze, the typical gaze behaviour present during executed and observed goal-directed actions.


Child Development | 2006

Newborns' Face Recognition: Role of Inner and Outer Facial Features.

C Turati; Viola Macchi Cassia; Francesca Simion; Irene Leo


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2005

Three-month-olds’ visual preference for faces and its underlying visual processing mechanisms

C Turati; Eloisa Valenza; Irene Leo; Francesca Simion


Infancy | 2010

Intersensory Perception at Birth: Newborns Match Nonhuman Primate Faces and Voices.

David J. Lewkowicz; Irene Leo; Francesca Simion


Child Development | 2006

Perceptual Completion in Newborn Human Infants

Eloisa Valenza; Irene Leo; Lucia Gava; Francesca Simion


Progress in Brain Research | 2007

How face specialization emerges in the first months of life

Francesca Simion; Irene Leo; C Turati; Eloisa Valenza; Beatrice Dalla Barba


Child Development | 2008

Congruency as a Nonspecific Perceptual Property Contributing to Newborns' Face Preference

Viola Macchi Cassia; Eloisa Valenza; Francesca Simion; Irene Leo

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Viola Macchi Cassia

University of Milano-Bicocca

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