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How Babies Perceive The World At Three Days To A Year Is Eye-Opening, Indeed
By Mikelle Leow, 09 Aug 2021
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Photo 16903977 / Baby Eyes © via Sebastian Czapnik | Dreamstime.com
It’s often puzzling what goes on in babies’ minds when they’re laughing at the most unexpected things or, worse still, crying for no obvious reason. If only we could retrace our steps to walk in their teeny shoes.
Until that’s possible, we could, at least, take a glimpse at things through the lens of newborns. A graphic created by the Ohio Optometric Association simulates the expected vision of infants at three days, a month, three months, six months, and a year, and it’s little wonder they’re crying so much.
It turns out that that loving gaze into your eyes might not be as you might perceive it to be. As detailed by What to Expect, a baby isn’t used to seeing, having spent about nine months in the darkness of a womb. As such, their vision would be fuzzy, or they’d be cross-eyed, until there’s enough time to acclimate to the bright and noisy world.
At around three months, it would be much easier for babies to follow things around, even reaching out to grab moving objects.
Depth perception kicks in at about the six month-mark, and it’s when an infant can finally see in 3D, Healthline explains. This ability significantly improves by the age of one, which is when babies can also “throw things with some precision, so watch out!” warns the medical advice site.
A baby’s vision should be fully developed by age three, or 36 months, if you’re using mom and dad math.
cool idea of how fresh new babies see the world from
coolguides
[via r/coolguides, Healthline, What to Expect, cover photo 16903977 / Baby Eyes © via Sebastian Czapnik | Dreamstime.com]
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