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Abstract: The capacity
for infants to form mental representations of hidden
or occluded objects can be decomposed into two tasks:
one process that identifies salient objects, and a
second complementary process that identifies salient
locations. This functional decomposition is supported
by the distinction between dorsal and ventral extrastriate
visual processing in the primate visual system. This
approach is illustrated by presenting an eye-movement
model that incorporates both dorsal and ventral processing
streams, and by using the model to simulate infants’ reactions
to possible and impossible events from an infant looking-time
study (Baillargeon, 1986). As expected, the model highlights
how the dorsal system is sensitive to the location
of a key feature in these events (i.e., the location
of an obstacle), while the ventral system responds
equivalently to the possible and impossible events.
These results are used to help explain infants’ reactions
in looking-time studies.
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