2006
Perception of audiovisual rhythm and its invariance in 4‐ to 10‐month‐old infants
Lewkowicz D, Marcovitch S. Perception of audiovisual rhythm and its invariance in 4‐ to 10‐month‐old infants. Developmental Psychobiology 2006, 48: 288-300. PMID: 16617468, DOI: 10.1002/dev.20140.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTest trialsRelative temporal differencesTemporal pattern changesRhythmic patternsNovel tempoExperiment 1Experiment 2Pattern invarianceHuman infantsNovel rhythmFamiliar rhythmsTempo variationsPerceptionTempoMonths of ageTypes of changesRhythmic fashionInfantsInvarianceTrialsTemporal differencesRhythmAgeSuch patternsObjects
2000
Infants' Perception of the Audible, Visible, and Bimodal Attributes of Multimodal Syllables
Lewkowicz D. Infants' Perception of the Audible, Visible, and Bimodal Attributes of Multimodal Syllables. Child Development 2000, 71: 1241-1257. PMID: 11108094, DOI: 10.1111/1467-8624.00226.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsInfants' perceptionAdult-directed mannerAudiovisual synchronyFeatural informationMultimodal speechNovel personSyllablesMonths infantsNovel syllablesPerceptionSame personAge groupsAttribute changesImportant dimensionTypes of changesPersonsDetection of changesSpeechAsynchronyEarly developmentHabituationInfantsAttributesSynchrony
1998
Infants' response to the audible and visible properties of the human face: II. Discrimination of differences between singing and adult‐directed speech
Lewkowicz D. Infants' response to the audible and visible properties of the human face: II. Discrimination of differences between singing and adult‐directed speech. Developmental Psychobiology 1998, 32: 261-274. PMID: 9589215, DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1098-2302(199805)32:4<261::aid-dev1>3.0.co;2-l.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAcoustic StimulationAge FactorsAttentionChild DevelopmentDiscrimination, PsychologicalFaceFemaleFixation, OcularHabituation, PsychophysiologicHumansInfantInfant BehaviorMaleMultivariate AnalysisMusicPattern Recognition, VisualPhotic StimulationSex FactorsSingle-Blind MethodSpeech PerceptionTime FactorsVoiceConceptsAdult-directed mannerAdult-directed speechHuman faceSeparate test trialsDiscrimination of differencesInfant responsivenessTest trialsInfants' responsesMonths of agePrepared scriptAudible featuresVocal characteristicsVisible propertiesGender differencesSpeechSingingTypes of changesFacePersonsBimodal changeAge groupsVisible featuresInfantsMale personsBimodal feature
1996
Infants' Response to the Audible and Visible Properties of the Human Face: 1. Role of Lexical–Syntactic Content, Temporal Synchrony, Gender, and Manner of Speech
Lewkowicz D. Infants' Response to the Audible and Visible Properties of the Human Face: 1. Role of Lexical–Syntactic Content, Temporal Synchrony, Gender, and Manner of Speech. Developmental Psychology 1996, 32: 347-366. DOI: 10.1037/0012-1649.32.2.347.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchHuman faceManner of speechInfants' perceptionProsody cuesSynchrony relationsTemporal synchronyInfants' responsesMultimodal representationsSpeaker genderPrepared scriptAudible featuresMultimodal featuresVisible propertiesOlder groupSpeechPerceptionFaceMonths of ageTypes of changesVisible representationGenderCuesRepresentationInfantsSynchrony