Kotsoni E, de Haan M, Johnson M H
Université Catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.
Perception. 2001;30(9):1115-25. doi: 10.1068/p3155.
Recent research indicates that adults show categorical perception of facial expressions of emotion. It is not known whether this is a basic characteristic of perception that is present from the earliest weeks of life, or whether it is one that emerges more gradually with experience in perceiving and interpreting expressions. We report two experiments designed to investigate whether young infants, like adults, show categorical perception of facial expressions. 7-month-old infants were shown photographic quality continua of interpolated (morphed) facial expressions derived from two prototypes of fear and happiness. In the first experiment, we used a visual-preference technique to identify the infants' category boundary between happiness and fear. In the second experiment, we used a combined familiarisation-visual-preference technique to compare infants' discrimination of pairs of expressions that were equally physically different but that did or did not cross the emotion-category boundary. The results suggest that 7-month-old infants (i) show evidence of categorical perception of facial expressions of emotion, and (ii) show persistent interest in looking at fearful expressions.
近期研究表明,成年人对情绪的面部表情表现出类别知觉。目前尚不清楚这是一种从生命最初几周就存在的基本知觉特征,还是一种随着感知和解读表情的经验而逐渐出现的特征。我们报告了两项实验,旨在研究幼儿是否像成年人一样对面部表情表现出类别知觉。向7个月大的婴儿展示从恐惧和快乐两种原型衍生而来的插值(变形)面部表情的高质量照片连续体。在第一个实验中,我们使用视觉偏好技术来确定婴儿在快乐和恐惧之间的类别边界。在第二个实验中,我们使用了一种结合了熟悉化和视觉偏好的技术,来比较婴儿对在物理上同样不同但跨越或未跨越情绪类别边界的表情对的辨别能力。结果表明,7个月大的婴儿(i)表现出对情绪面部表情的类别知觉的证据,并且(ii)对观看恐惧表情表现出持续的兴趣。