Quinn Paul C, Uttley Lesley, Lee Kang, Gibson Alan, Smith Michael, Slater Alan M, Pascalis Olivier
Department of Psychology, University of Delaware, Delaware, USA.
J Neuropsychol. 2008 Mar;2(1):15-26. doi: 10.1348/174866407x231029.
There has been a recent surge of interest in the question of how infants respond to the social attributes of race and gender information in faces. This work has demonstrated that by 3 months of age, infants will respond preferentially to same-race faces and faces depicting the gender of the primary caregiver. In the current study, we investigated emergence of the female face preference for same- versus other-race faces to examine whether the determinants of preference for face gender and race are independent or interactive in young infants. In Expt I, 3-month-old Caucasian infants displayed a preference for female over male faces when the faces were Caucasian, but not when the faces were Asian. In Expt 2, new-born Caucasian infants did not demonstrate a preference for female over male faces for Caucasian faces. The results are discussed in terms of a face prototype that becomes progressively tuned as it is structured by the interaction of the gender and race of faces that are experienced during early development.
最近,人们对婴儿如何对面部的种族和性别信息的社会属性做出反应这一问题的兴趣激增。这项研究表明,到3个月大时,婴儿会优先对同种族面孔以及描绘主要照顾者性别的面孔做出反应。在当前的研究中,我们调查了对同种族与其他种族面孔的女性面孔偏好的出现情况,以检验在幼儿中对面部性别和种族的偏好决定因素是独立的还是相互作用的。在实验1中,3个月大的白人婴儿在面孔为白人时表现出对女性面孔而非男性面孔的偏好,但当面孔为亚洲人时则没有。在实验2中,新生白人婴儿对于白人面孔并没有表现出对女性面孔而非男性面孔的偏好。我们根据一个面部原型来讨论这些结果,该原型在早期发育过程中通过所经历的面孔的性别和种族的相互作用而逐渐得到调整。