Children Track Probabilistic Distributions of Facial Cues Across Individuals

Children face a difficult task in learning how to reason about other people's emotions. How intensely facial configurations are displayed can vary not only according to what and how much emotion people are experiencing, but also across individuals based on differences in personality, gender, an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. General 2022-02, Vol.151 (2), p.506-511
Hauptverfasser: Woodard, Kristina, Plate, Rista C., Pollak, Seth D.
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container_issue 2
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container_title Journal of experimental psychology. General
container_volume 151
creator Woodard, Kristina
Plate, Rista C.
Pollak, Seth D.
description Children face a difficult task in learning how to reason about other people's emotions. How intensely facial configurations are displayed can vary not only according to what and how much emotion people are experiencing, but also across individuals based on differences in personality, gender, and culture. To navigate these sources of variability, children may use statistical information about other's facial cues to make interpretations about perceived emotions in others. We examined this possibility by testing children's ability to adjust to differences in the intensity of facial cues across different individuals. In the present study, children (6- to 10-year-olds) categorized the information communicated by facial configurations of emotion varying continuously from "calm" to "upset," with differences in the intensity of each actor's facial movements. We found that children's threshold for categorizing a facial configuration as "upset" shifted depending on the statistical information encountered about each of the different individuals. These results suggest that children are able to track individual differences in facial behavior and use these differences to flexibly update their interpretations of facial cues associated with emotion.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/xge0001087
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source APA PsycARTICLES; MEDLINE
subjects Adjustment
Child
Children & youth
Classification (Cognitive Process)
Cognition & reasoning
Cross Cultural Differences
Cues
Emotion Recognition
Emotions
Experimental psychology
Face
Face (Anatomy)
Facial Expression
Female
Human
Human Sex Differences
Humans
Learning
Male
Personality
Personality traits
Probability
Statistics
Visual Perception
title Children Track Probabilistic Distributions of Facial Cues Across Individuals
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