Gross Thomas F
Department of Psychology, University of Redlands, Redlands, California 92373-0999, USA.
J Abnorm Child Psychol. 2004 Oct;32(5):469-80. doi: 10.1023/b:jacp.0000037777.17698.01.
Children who experienced autism, mental retardation, and language disorders; and, children in a clinical control group were shown photographs of human female, orangutan, and canine (boxer) faces expressing happiness, sadness, anger, surprise and a neutral expression. For each species of faces, children were asked to identify the happy, sad, angry, or surprised expressions. In Experiment 1, error patterns suggested that children who experienced autism were attending to features of the lower face when making judgements about emotional expressions. Experiment 2 supported this impression. When recognizing facial emotion, children without autism performed better when viewing the full face, compared to the upper and lower face alone. Children with autism performed no better when viewing the full face than they did when viewing partial faces; and, performed no better than chance when viewing the upper face alone. The results are discussed with respect to differences in the manner that children with and without autism process social information communicated by the face.
研究人员向患有自闭症、智力迟钝和语言障碍的儿童,以及临床对照组的儿童展示了人类女性、猩猩和犬类(拳师犬)面部表达快乐、悲伤、愤怒、惊讶和中性表情的照片。对于每种面部物种,研究人员要求儿童识别出快乐、悲伤、愤怒或惊讶的表情。在实验1中,错误模式表明,患有自闭症的儿童在判断情绪表情时关注的是面部下半部分的特征。实验2支持了这一观点。在识别面部情绪时,与只看面部上半部分和下半部分相比,没有自闭症的儿童在看完整面部时表现更好。患有自闭症的儿童在看完整面部时的表现并不比看部分面部时更好;而且,他们在只看面部上半部分时的表现也不比随机猜测好。研究结果就患有和未患有自闭症的儿童处理通过面部传达的社会信息的方式差异进行了讨论。