Literature DB >> 28758786

Developmental changes in infants' categorization of anger and disgust facial expressions.

Ashley L Ruba1, Kristin M Johnson1, Lasana T Harris1, Makeba Parramore Wilbourn1.   

Abstract

For decades, scholars have examined how children first recognize emotional facial expressions. This research has found that infants younger than 10 months can discriminate negative, within-valence facial expressions in looking time tasks, and children older than 24 months struggle to categorize these expressions in labeling and free-sort tasks. Specifically, these older children, and even adults, consistently misidentify disgust expressions as anger. Although some scholars have hypothesized that young infants would also be unable to categorize anger and disgust expressions, this question has not been empirically tested. In addition, very little research has examined developmental changes in infants' perceptual categorization abilities with high arousal, within-valence emotions. For this reason, the current study tested 10- and 18-month-olds in a looking time task and found that both age groups could perceptually categorize anger and disgust facial expressions. Furthermore, 18-month-olds showed a heightened sensitivity to novel anger expressions, suggesting that, over the second year of life, infants' emotion categorization skills undergo developmental change. These findings are the first to demonstrate that young infants can categorize anger and disgust facial expressions and to document how this skill develops and changes over time. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28758786     DOI: 10.1037/dev0000381

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychol        ISSN: 0012-1649


  9 in total

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4.  Linguistic and developmental influences on superordinate facial configuration categorization in infancy.

Authors:  Ashley L Ruba; Andrew N Meltzoff; Betty M Repacholi
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5.  How White American Children Develop Racial Biases in Emotion Reasoning.

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6.  The Development of Negative Event-Emotion Matching in Infancy: Implications for Theories in Affective Science.

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Journal:  Affect Sci       Date:  2020-04-16

7.  Categorical Perception of Facial Emotions in Infancy.

Authors:  Hannah White; Alyson Chroust; Alison Heck; Rachel Jubran; Ashley Galati; Ramesh S Bhatt
Journal:  Infancy       Date:  2018-12-02

Review 8.  Action Understanding Promoted by Interoception in Children: A Developmental Model.

Authors:  Hui Zhou; Qiyang Gao; Wei Chen; Qiaobo Wei
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-02-21

9.  The representation of emotion knowledge across development.

Authors:  Kristina Woodard; Martin Zettersten; Seth D Pollak
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  9 in total

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