@misc{cogprints4066,
          volume = {117},
          editor = {Luc Berthouze and Hideki Kozima and Christopher G. Prince and Giulio Sandini and Georgi Stojanov and Giorgio Metta and Christian Balkenius},
           title = {Early sensitivity to interpersonal timing},
          author = {Anne Henning and Tricia Striano},
       publisher = {Lund University Cognitive Studies},
            year = {2004},
           pages = {145--146},
        keywords = {mother-infant interaction, intersubjectivity, temporal timing, social contingency },
             url = {http://cogprints.org/4066/},
        abstract = {Sensitivity to timing in interaction was assessed in mother-infant interaction. In Study 1, three-month-old infants were presented with an image of their mother interacting with them on television, which was either live or temporally delayed by 1 second. Infants detected the temporal delay and were more attentive when the mother was presented live compared to delayed by 1 second. In Study 2, mothers interacted with an image of their three-month-old infant, which was either live or temporally delayed by 1 second. Mothers did not respond to a 1-second delay in their infants' behavior. In Study 3 and 4, the results were replicated with six-month-old infants.}
}