Holly Rayson
Holly Rayson
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Maternal gaze to the infant face: Effects of infant age and facial configuration during mother-infant engagement in the first nine weeks
Background. Adult gaze plays an important role in early infant development, and infants are highly sensitive to its presence and …
Leonardo De Pascalis
,
Natalie Kkeli
,
Bhismadev Chakrabarti
,
Louise Dalton
,
Kyla Vaillancourt
,
Holly Rayson
,
Sarah Bicknell
,
Tim Goodacre
,
Peter Cooper
,
Alan Stein
,
Lynne Murray
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Development of sensorimotor beta bursts in human infants
This project uses EEG to explore the existence of beta bursts (i.e. functional activity related to movement) in the infant brain, and how these may develop over time.
Effects on cleft lip on adults' perception of infants
This project uses eye-tracking, behavioural observation, and questionnaires to explore how the presence of infant cleft lip influences adult gaze and perceptions of infants, and how this may influence early parent-infant interactions.
Perception of facial cues in early development
Developmental EEG and eye-tracking research on the perception of facial cues (facial expressions and gaze shifts) in infants and young children, in humans and non-human primates. The studies focus on how sensorimotor representations develop in the infant brain, including the role of early social experience, and how atypical early attention biases to facial expressions may increase risk for socioemotional problems. Supported by a Medical Research Council Studentship and Marie Curie Individual Fellowship.
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