Deaf Infants’ Gaze Behavior

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 ม.ค. 2025

ความคิดเห็น • 13

  • @kpfluger15
    @kpfluger15 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    The "expirements " I've seen in the last couple videos are very interesting. I wish there was more information given on all the videos like this one tho.

  • @slowfire2
    @slowfire2 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    This is interesting. I feel like hearing people in hearing culture use their ears for so much and really don't use their eyes. It's like they look with their ears. It might be both due to being raised with only vocal languages and the Hearing culture, right? It's such a heavy emphasis on sounds that they kinda forget to develope sight and kinetic abilities.

    • @AdrianD011
      @AdrianD011 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Interesting perspective, but I wouldn't say that children raised with acuity in all major senses forget to develop their sight and kinetic abilities, but rather, their developmental focus has to be more evenly spread across all the senses accessible to them, because from a biological standpoint, that would be most advantageous for an individuals survival, and so they don;t need to spend as much energy as deaf children / other people with limited sensory abilities, to focus on honing remaining senses to such a high degree.
      With children / people who are born, or become deprived of one of their senses (ex. becoming deaf/ being born congenitally deaf) their range of senses unfortunately becomes more limited. The brain however, due to its plasticity (ability to change) will overtime adapt to the missing sense by further developing its ability to interpret other senses such as touch, taste, vision, or smell, in order to better help the individual survive in their environment and compensate for the loss of their sense of audition.
      More briefly, most individuals who have all major senses don't need their brains to become more sensitive in visual acuity or other senses compared to individuals who are deaf, because biologically they don't require it in order to more successfully live in their environments (the energy costs of that extra brain-power dedicated to better vision, would not outweigh the survival benefits). It is however, very impressive to see those who are deaf, hearing impaired or others with sensory limitations in one sense, show how much more capable they can be in interpreting their environments with their other in-tact senses.

  • @marlenemedina5949
    @marlenemedina5949 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Code-switching! Bimodal bilingual studies are so important in validating how ASL, and other signed languages, are real languages!

  • @ATSucks1
    @ATSucks1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Oh look! This video has comments turned on. How stunning and brave, because those are two words I would not use to describe the cowardice against receiving critisim for you baby tests. Honestly, yall felt a need to test a babies reaction of fear to a potential threat ... the baby doesn't need to grow up, the ones that concocted and conducted the tests do. And the moderator team too. If you can't accept public criticism don't publish on a public platform.

    • @JacobAKAcornpop
      @JacobAKAcornpop 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Why do they get criticized? Cause people think they treat the kids unfairly or something? I was wondering why all the comments were disabled.

    • @Sputnik695
      @Sputnik695 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@JacobAKAcornpop they're pretty much Nazis by the look of it

    • @JacobAKAcornpop
      @JacobAKAcornpop 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@Sputnik695 your'e an idiot it's called studying human nature.

    • @Sputnik695
      @Sputnik695 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@JacobAKAcornpop idiot? Yes. Unaware? Not so much. Human nature and the study of it doesn't necessarily constitute crossing boundaries. You'd, uh, see that by the whole having comments turned off and also lack of, what should I call it, modesty of their "experiments" that it's got a darker incentive behind it. Respectfully, idiot.

    • @JacobAKAcornpop
      @JacobAKAcornpop 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Sputnik695 what's the darker incentive?