Serrano J M, Iglesias J, Loeches A
Departamento de Psicología Biológica y de la Salud, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain.
Dev Psychobiol. 1992 Sep;25(6):411-25. doi: 10.1002/dev.420250603.
On the assumption that the ability to discriminate facial expressions has adaptive value to infants during early social exchanges, ethologically based theorists have argued that this ability is innate. Guided by this perspective, we investigated the ability of infants, 4-6 months old to recognize and discriminate facial expressions of anger, fear, and surprise. Results obtained with an infant-controlled habituation-recovery procedure showed that infants both discriminated and recognized these expressions when portrayed by several adult female models. In addition, infants spent more time looking at expressions of anger and surprise than at fear expressions. These results suggest that infants can abstract configurations of features that give affective meaning to facial expressions. It is suggested that the differences in habituation to each expression might be the result of their distinct functional signification for the infant.
基于这样一种假设,即辨别面部表情的能力在早期社交互动中对婴儿具有适应性价值,基于动物行为学的理论家认为这种能力是天生的。受这一观点的指导,我们研究了4至6个月大的婴儿识别和辨别愤怒、恐惧和惊讶面部表情的能力。通过婴儿控制的习惯化-恢复程序获得的结果表明,当由几位成年女性模型表现这些表情时,婴儿既能辨别也能识别它们。此外,婴儿注视愤怒和惊讶表情的时间比注视恐惧表情的时间更长。这些结果表明,婴儿能够提取赋予面部表情情感意义的特征构型。有人认为,对每种表情习惯化的差异可能是其对婴儿具有不同功能意义的结果。