The Categories of Hue in Infancy
- 16 January 1976
- journal article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 191 (4223) , 201-202
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1246610
Abstract
Infant looking time was monitored during habituation to the repeated presentation of a wavelength stimulus selected from one basic adult hue category and after a change in stimulation. Recovery from habituation was greater to a wavelength selected from an adjacent hue category than to a wavelength from the same category even though these two stimuli were equally distant (in nanometers) from the habituation wavelength. Differential responding evidenced infants' categorical perception of hue; that is, infants see the physically continuous spectrum as divided into the hue categories of blue, green, yellow, and red. These results help to resolve the long-standing controversy surrounding the primacy of perception over language in the organization of hue.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Influence of Visual Perception on Culture1American Anthropologist, 1975
- A continuous interference-filter monochromatorBehavior Research Methods, 1974
- Derivation of wavelength discrimination from color namingJournal of the Optical Society of America, 1973
- Color vision and color naming: A psychophysiological hypothesis of cultural difference.Psychological Bulletin, 1973
- Psychometric and psychophysical hue discrimination functions for the pigeonVision Research, 1972
- Derivation of wavelength discrimination from colour-naming dataVision Research, 1971
- Speech Perception in InfantsScience, 1971
- Bezold–Brücke Hue Shift Measured by Color-Naming Technique*Journal of the Optical Society of America, 1965
- Sensations Aroused by Monochromatic Stimuli and Their PredictionOptica Acta: International Journal of Optics, 1954
- RESEARCHES ON NORMAL AND DEFECTIVE COLOR VISIONOptometry and Vision Science, 1947