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 ›› 2024, Vol. 32 ›› Issue (12): 2100-2108.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1042.2024.02100

• 研究前沿 • 上一篇    下一篇

婴儿对情绪信息的加工:认知发展特征及脑机制

莫李澄, 李奇, 张丹丹   

  1. 四川师范大学脑与心理科学研究院, 成都 610066
  • 收稿日期:2023-12-12 出版日期:2024-12-15 发布日期:2024-09-24
  • 通讯作者: 张丹丹, E-mail: zhangdd05@gmail.com
  • 基金资助:
    * 国家自然科学基金(32271102)和国家社会科学重大项目(20&ZD153)资助

Emotional information processing in infants: Cognitive development and neural mechanisms

MO Licheng, LI Qi, ZHANG Dandan   

  1. Institute of Brain and Psychological Sciences, Sichuan Normal University, Chengdu 610066, China
  • Received:2023-12-12 Online:2024-12-15 Published:2024-09-24

摘要: 语音韵律和面孔表情所传达的情绪性信息是人类解读他人情绪并进行人际互动的基础。探究婴儿对这两种载体所传达情绪信息的感知、辨别及评估, 有利于加深对婴儿认知发展特征和脑机制的理解。本文系统回顾了婴儿情绪研究, 发现颞叶和额叶皮层在婴儿情绪性语音和面孔表情加工中发挥着重要作用; 尽管婴儿的情绪加工涉及大脑双侧半球, 但已初步展现出了与成人类似的右半球优势。婴儿在出生后一周内即可分辨情绪信息, 并表现出对正性情绪的加工偏向。婴儿在6月龄左右对情绪的加工偏向逐渐从正性向负性转变。12月龄时, 婴儿的负性情绪偏向基本稳定, 且能够理解情绪性语音和面孔中的情绪涵义, 并据此指导自己的行为。基于这些发现, 我们提出了“情绪偏向发展理论”。此外, 视-听跨感官模态信息对于婴儿对特定情绪的辨别和理解起到积极的作用。

关键词: 婴儿, 情绪加工, 语音韵律, 面孔表情

Abstract:

The emotional information conveyed through phonological prosody and facial expressions forms the foundation for human interpretation of others' emotions and facilitates interpersonal interactions. Investigating how infants perceive, discriminate, and evaluate emotions embedded in these two modalities deepens our understanding of their cognitive development and neural mechanisms. Infants’ emotional processing primarily relies on facial expressions, speech, and cross-modal sensory processing involving both visual and auditory inputs.

In emotional facial processing, the temporal and frontal cortex are the core brain regions. Although emotional processing in infants involves both brain hemispheres, the right hemisphere appears to have an advantage. Remarkably, just 36 hours after birth, newborns can distinguish and imitate facial expressions, demonstrating their sensitivity and interactive ability with the surrounding environment. Two-day-old newborns can generally distinguish different facial expressions, such as happiness, sadness, surprise, and fear. By 3~4 months of age, infants can reliably differentiate between various facial expressions. At 5 months, they begin to distinguish different types and forms of facial expressions, including dynamic ones. After 6 months, infants exhibit classification perception of emotional facial expressions. By 7 months, they are very sensitive to dynamic facial expressions. By 8 months and beyond, infants start to show an understanding of emotional facial expressions, with positive emotions being understood earlier than negative ones. Although the global brain network for infant emotional facial perception is not yet fully mature at this stage, local specific brain networks have developed to a level almost equivalent to those of adults.

In infants’ emotional speech processing, the temporal cortex is the core brain area. During the first week after birth, babies exhibit considerable sensitivity to emotional speech and can generally distinguish different emotional tones, which helps improve their interactions with others. By two months of age, infants can distinguish between happy and neutral speech, showing a greater sensitivity to happy voices. At 5 months, infants are able to differentiate between happy, angry, and neutral voices, again displaying a preference for happy voices. By 7 months, infants can distinguish between happy, sad, angry, and neutral voices, with sensitivity to angry and sad tones.

Babies exhibit the ability to process emotional information across multiple modalities, demonstrated by their capacity to match and transfer emotional information across different sensory modalities. These abilities gradually improve with age. Compared to the processing of emotional speech and facial expressions, the development of cross-modal emotional processing in infants occurs later.

Emotional bias manifests differently at various stages of infant development. Infants predominantly exhibit positive emotional processing in the first 6 months, but this gradually shifts to a stable negative bias after 6 months. Based on this observation, we propose the “Developmental Theory of Emotional Bias”: Human emotional processing biases change around six months of age, with positive biases observed in infants aged 6 months and below, and increasingly stable negative biases observed in infants aged 6 to 7 months and beyond. From a cognitive development perspective, the infants’ brain prioritizes processing stimuli relevant to their developmental stage. For infants aged 6 months and below, a more positive response to positive emotions may help establish strong connections with parents and ensure more care, thus favoring positive emotions. After 6 months, as infants develop motor abilities such as crawling, running, and jumping, they begin to actively explore the world. At this stage, they need to be more sensitive to threatening information to protect themselves from harm. Therefore, infants at this stage prefer negative emotions.

Overall, as infants age, their ability to process emotions gradually improves, encompassing multiple levels from identifying and distinguishing emotions to capturing emotional changes and eventually understanding and applying emotions. Currently, research on visual, auditory, and cross-modal emotional information processing during infancy has made significant progress and established a relatively solid foundation. Future research needs to systematically investigate emotional processing from infancy through early childhood to construct a complete developmental timeline and reveal in-depth changes in infant emotional development. Additionally, specific experimental designs must rigorously control for additional variables and combine multiple research methods to provide more convincing evidence for understanding infant cognitive development and brain mechanisms.

Key words: infant, emotion processing, speech prosody, facial expression

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