Marta Bakker
Uppsala University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marta Bakker.
Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience | 2015
Gustaf Gredebäck; Katharina Kaduk; Marta Bakker; Janna M. Gottwald; Therese L. Ekberg; Claudia Elsner; Vincent M. Reid; Benjamin Kenward
Highlights • Neural correlates of 6-month-old infants’ detection of pro-social agents.• ERP component P400 over posterior temporal areas index social valence.• First non-behavioral demonstration of pro-social preferences in young infants.
Infant Behavior & Development | 2011
Marta Bakker; Olga Kochukhova; Claes von Hofsten
A conversation is made up of visual and auditory signals in a complex flow of events. What is the relative importance of these components for young childrens ability to maintain attention on a conversation? In the present set of experiments the visual and auditory signals were disentangled in four filmed events. The visual events were either accompanied by the speech sounds of the conversation or by matched motor sounds and the auditory events by either the natural visual turn taking of the conversation or a matched turn taking of toy trucks. A cornea-reflection technique was used to record the gaze-pattern of subjects while they were looking at the films. Three age groups of typically developing children were studied; 6-month-olds, 1-year-olds and 3-year-olds. The results show that the children are more attracted by the social component of the conversation independent of the kind of sound used. Older children find spoken language more interesting than motor sound. Children look longer at the speaking agent when humans maintain the conversation. The study revealed that children are more attracted to the mouth than to the eyes area. The ability to make more predictive gaze shifts develops gradually over age.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2014
Claudia Elsner; Marta Bakker; Katharina J. Rohlfing; Gustaf Gredebäck
Highlights • Study on infants’ online perception of give-me gestures during a social interaction.• We tested if properties of social goals influence infants’ online gaze behavior.• Infants encoded a give-me gesture and an inverted hand shape differently.• Gaze shifts were faster when a receiving hand forms a give-me gesture.• Twelve-month-old infants are sensitive to social goals.
Neuropsychologia | 2011
Terje Falck-Ytter; Marta Bakker; Claes von Hofsten
Both orienting to audiovisual synchrony and to biological motion are adaptive responses. The ability to integrate correlated information from multiple senses reduces processing load and underlies the perception of a multimodal and unified world. Perceiving biological motion facilitates filial attachment and detection of predators/prey. In the literature, these mechanisms are discussed in isolation. In this eye-tracking study, we tested their relative strengths in young human infants. We showed five-month-old infants point-light animation pairs of human motion, accompanied by a soundtrack. We found that audiovisual synchrony was a strong determinant of attention when it was embedded in biological motion (two upright animations). However, when biological motion was shown together with distorted biological motion (upright animation and inverted animation, respectively), infants looked at the upright animation and disregarded audiovisual synchrony. Thus, infants oriented to biological motion rather than multimodally unified physical events. These findings have important implications for understanding the developmental trajectory of brain specialization in early human infancy.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2015
Marta Bakker; Katharina Kaduk; Claudia Elsner; Joshua Juvrud; Gustaf Gredebäck
This study investigated the neural basis of non-verbal communication. Event-related potentials were recorded while 29 nine-month-old infants were presented with a give-me gesture (experimental condition) and the same hand shape but rotated 90°, resulting in a non-communicative hand configuration (control condition). We found different responses in amplitude between the two conditions, captured in the P400 ERP component. Moreover, the size of this effect was modulated by participants’ sex, with girls generally demonstrating a larger relative difference between the two conditions than boys.
Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience | 2016
Martyna Galazka; Marta Bakker; Gustaf Gredebäck; Pär Nyström
We investigated the neural correlates of chasing perception in infancy to determine whether animated interactions are processed as social events. By using EEG and an ERP design with animations of simple geometric shapes, we examined whether the positive posterior (P400) component, previously found in response to social stimuli, as well as the attention related negative fronto-central component (Nc), differs when infants observed a chaser versus a non-chaser. In Study 1, the chaser was compared to an inanimate object. In Study 2, the chaser was compared to an animate but not chasing agent (randomly moving agent). Results demonstrate no difference in the Nc component, but statistically higher P400 amplitude when the chasing agent was compared to either an inanimate object or a random object. We also find a difference in the N290 component in both studies and in the P200 component in Study 2, when the chasing agent is compared to the randomly moving agent. The present studies demonstrate for the first time that infants’ process correlated motion such as chasing as a social interaction. The perception of the chasing agent elicits stronger time-locked responses, denoting a link between motion perception and social cognition.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2016
Katharina Kaduk; Marta Bakker; Joshua Juvrud; Gustaf Gredebäck; Gert Westermann; Judith Lunn; Vincent M. Reid
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2016
Marta Bakker; Jessica A. Sommerville; Gustaf Gredebäck
Child Development | 2018
Joshua Juvrud; Marta Bakker; Katharina Kaduk; Josje M. DeValk; Gustaf Gredebäck; Benjamin Kenward
SRCD, Society for Research in Child Development, Philadelphia, USA. March 2015. | 2015
Joshua Juvrud; Marta Bakker; Gustaf Gredebäck