Literature DB >> 11405578

Evidence for referential understanding in the emotions domain at twelve and eighteen months.

L J Moses1, D A Baldwin, J G Rosicky, G Tidball.   

Abstract

Infants as young as 12 months readily modulate their behavior toward novel, ambiguous objects based on emotional responses that others display. Such social-referencing skill offers powerful benefits to infants' knowledge acquisition, but the magnitude of these benefits depends on whether they appreciate the referential quality of others' emotional messages, and are skilled at using cues to reference (e.g., gaze direction, body posture) to guide their interpretation of such messages. Two studies demonstrated referential understanding in 12- and 18-month-olds' responses to another's emotional outburst. Infants relied on the presence versus absence of referential cues to determine whether an emotional message should be linked with a salient, novel object in the first study (N = 48), and they actively consulted referential cues to disambiguate the intended target of an affective display in the second study (N = 32). These findings provide the first experimental evidence of such sophisticated referential abilities in 12-month-olds, as well as the first evidence that infant social referencing at any age actually trades on referential understanding.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11405578     DOI: 10.1111/1467-8624.00311

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  39 in total

Review 1.  Facial expressions, their communicatory functions and neuro-cognitive substrates.

Authors:  R J R Blair
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2003-03-29       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  Toddlers learn words in a foreign language: the role of native vocabulary knowledge.

Authors:  Melissa Koenig; Amanda L Woodward
Journal:  J Child Lang       Date:  2012-03

3.  Once a frog-lover, always a frog-lover?: Infants' goal generalization is influenced by the nature of accompanying speech.

Authors:  Alia Martin; Catharyn C Shelton; Jessica A Sommerville
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4.  "Native" Objects and Collaborators: Infants' Object Choices and Acts of Giving Reflect Favor for Native Over Foreign Speakers.

Authors:  Katherine D Kinzler; Emmanuel Dupoux; Elizabeth S Spelke
Journal:  J Cogn Dev       Date:  2012-02-09

5.  Detecting agents.

Authors:  Susan C Johnson
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2003-03-29       Impact factor: 6.237

6.  Preverbal infants identify emotional reactions that are incongruent with goal outcomes.

Authors:  Amy E Skerry; Elizabeth S Spelke
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2013-12-07

7.  The emergence of intention attribution in infancy.

Authors:  Amanda L Woodward; Jessica A Sommerville; Sarah Gerson; Annette M E Henderson; Jennifer Buresh
Journal:  Psychol Learn Motiv       Date:  2009

8.  The Social Context of Infant Intention Understanding.

Authors:  Sarah Dunphy-Lelii; Jennifer Labounty; Jonathan D Lane; Henry M Wellman
Journal:  J Cogn Dev       Date:  2014-01-01

9.  Developmental changes in the neural basis of interpreting communicative intent.

Authors:  A Ting Wang; Susan S Lee; Marian Sigman; Mirella Dapretto
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 3.436

10.  The informative value of emotional expressions: 'social referencing' in mother-child pretense.

Authors:  Tracy K Nishida; Angeline S Lillard
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2007-03
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