but used the same object bodies in the test trials that were presented during familiarization; that is, rather than testing infants with a novel object body, we used the same object body that infants had previously experienced. We hypothesized that if infants had represented the objects implied by the second-order correlation—that is, the body and the two parts connected to it—without seeing them previously, then they would treat them as familiar in the test phase and would not examine them extensively.