Gosselin Pierre, Warren Madeleine, Diotte Michèle
School of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
J Genet Psychol. 2002 Dec;163(4):479-95. doi: 10.1080/00221320209598697.
The authors investigated the extent to which children's understanding of the distinction between real and apparent emotions varied according to the motivation to hide emotions. Children, aged 6-7 and 10-11 years, were read stories designed to elicit either prosocial or self-protective motivated display rules and were asked to predict the facial expressions the protagonists would make to hide felt emotions. Children were found to understand the distinction between real and apparent emotions very well, independently of the type of motivation. Contrary to predictions, boys understood this distinction better than did girls when the motivation to hide positive emotions was prosocial. Children perceived neutralization as the most appropriate strategy to hide felt emotions, followed by masking.
作者们研究了儿童对真实情感与表面情感之间差异的理解程度如何根据隐藏情感的动机而变化。研究人员给6至7岁以及10至11岁的儿童朗读了一些故事,这些故事旨在引出亲社会或自我保护动机的表现规则,并要求他们预测故事主角为隐藏所感受到的情感会做出的面部表情。结果发现,儿童能够很好地理解真实情感与表面情感之间的差异,且与动机类型无关。与预测相反的是,当隐藏积极情感的动机是亲社会时,男孩比女孩更能理解这种差异。儿童认为中和是隐藏所感受到情感的最适当策略,其次是伪装。