We used static perimetry to evaluate the influence of a central stimul
us on infants' orienting toward stimuli in the temporal and nasal visu
al fields. Newborns, I-month-olds, and 4-month-olds (n = 252) were tes
ted monocularly with a flashing 6 degrees central light that either re
mained on or was turned off when an identical light was presented in t
he periphery. We measured whether infants made an eye movement toward
the peripheral lights more often than they moved their eye in the same
direction on control trials during which no peripheral stimulus was p
resented. At all three ages, the presence of a central stimulus had no
effect on the measured extent of either the temporal or nasal visual
field. Nor did it affect the latency to respond in 1- and 4-month-olds
(the only two ages at which we measured latency). Thus, under some ci
rcumstances, young infants appear to have no difficulty disengaging at
tention from a central stimulus and orienting toward a peripheral targ
et.