HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Predispositions Between Newborns and colleagues from the University of have published the Article: Difference in Visual Social Predispositions Between Newborns at Low- and High-risk for Autism, in the Journal: Scientific Reports Scientific Reports
- what: The authors demonstrate, for the first time, that inborn predispositions to attend to social stimuli, such as face-like patterns and biological motion, differ between HR and LR newborns. In this model, the visual preference observed at birth is due to an automatic and reflexive subcortical orienting mechanism, whereas what takes over is described as a learning mechanism or . . .
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