ISSN 1671-3710
CN 11-4766/R
主办:中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理科学进展 ›› 2023, Vol. 31 ›› Issue (9): 1688-1697.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1042.2023.01688

• 研究前沿 • 上一篇    下一篇

同步与否:婴儿基本面部表情识别的发展特点

朱丽雅, 莫凡, 张志豪, 赵科(), 傅小兰   

  1. 中国科学院心理研究所, 脑与认知科学国家重点实验室, 北京 100101;中国科学院大学心理学系, 北京 100049
  • 收稿日期:2022-03-25 出版日期:2023-09-15 发布日期:2023-05-31
  • 通讯作者: 赵科 E-mail:zhaok@psych.ac.cn
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金(32071055);国家自然科学基金(62061136001)

Synchronized or not: Developmental characteristics of basic facial expression recognition in infants

ZHU Liya, MO Fan, ZHANG Zhihao, ZHAO Ke(), FU Xiaolan   

  1. State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Science, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China; Department of Psychology, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
  • Received:2022-03-25 Online:2023-09-15 Published:2023-05-31
  • Contact: ZHAO Ke E-mail:zhaok@psych.ac.cn

摘要:

面部表情是通过眼部、口部等肌肉动作传递出来的情绪信号。婴儿对面部表情的正确识别是婴儿与外界交流的重要手段, 有利于情绪认知的发展。婴儿对基本面部表情识别的发展具有非同步性的特点:对正性效价表情的识别早于负性效价表情, 2个月大的婴儿能辨别出正性效价表情, 4~6个月大时能辨别出不同的负性效价表情; 情绪感知能力的发展早于情绪理解能力, 7个月大的婴儿已初步具备情绪感知能力, 12个月大的婴儿还不能准确区分不同的负性效价表情所表达的情绪意义。婴儿识别表情受到环境和认知因素的双重影响, 反映了基本情绪的激活到情绪图式的形成过程。

关键词: 婴儿, 面部表情, 情绪识别

Abstract:

Facial expressions are emotional signals conveyed through muscle movements, such as those in the eyes and mouth. Facial emotion recognition plays a crucial role in infant’s social and communicative development. The development of basic facial expression recognition in infants is asynchronous: the recognition of positive expressions occurs earlier than that of negative expressions, and the development of emotion perception is earlier than emotion understanding.
Infants recognize positive facial expressions earlier than negative ones. They can distinguish happy expressions when they are 2 months old, and negative expressions when they are 4-6 months old. Infant’s ability to perceive emotions develops earlier than their ability to understand emotions. The 7-month-old infant has initially possessed the emotion perception ability. They can not only distinguish the basic facial expressions, but also form a classification perception and master the visual observation strategy similar to that of adults. The development of emotional understanding is relatively lagging behind, and 12-month-old infants cannot accurately understand the emotional meaning conveyed by different the negative valence expressions. Infants' basic facial expression recognition undergoes a shift from positive bias to negative bias. In the first half of infancy, infants show an attentional bias to happy expressions, and from 5 months onwards, infants show an attentional bias to fearful expressions.
The development of infant’s ability to recognize basic facial expression recognition reflects the process from the activation of basic emotions to the formation of emotional schemas. Basic expressions are a preset system that humans evolved to adapt to the environment, and infants are born with the innate ability to express and recognize them. Once basic emotions are activated by the environment, infants acquire corresponding recognition abilites. Emotional schemas are acquired through postnatal development, and are the result of the dynamic interaction process between emotions and cognition. Both individual cognitive development and environmental stimuli play important roles in the formation of emotional schemas. The experience-expectant mechanism in the human brain enables infants to recognize positive expressions earlier than negative expressions, which helps infants to receive more feedback from adults. From the second half of infancy, infants may develop an attentional bias towards negative expression, which can aid in their better understanding of others’s feelings. There may also be a sensitive period during the second half of infancy for the development of the ability to recognize negative emotions. Moreover, the experience-dependent mechanism in the brain determines the plasticity of the brain's emotional neural network. The mother-infant relationship, family, social environment, race, and culture all can affect the development of an infant's ability to recognize facial expressions.

Key words: infant, facial expression, emotion recognition

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