Sullivan Margaret W, Lewis Michael
Institute for the Study of Child Development UMDNJ--Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ.
Infancy. 2012;17(2):159-178. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-7078.2011.00077.x.
Infants and their mothers participated in a longitudinal study of the sequelae of infant goal blockage responses. Four-month-old infants participated in a standard contingency learning/goal blockage procedure during which anger and sad facial expressions to the blockage were coded. When infants were 12- and 20- months-old, mothers completed a questionnaire about their children's tantrums. Tantrum scores increased with age and boys tended to show more tantrum behavior than girls. Anger expressed to goal blockage at 4 months was unrelated to tantrum behavior. There was a gender by sad expression interaction. Girls who expressed sadness in response to the goal blockage had lower total tantrum scores than boys; otherwise there was no difference. These results suggest that tantrums of infants who display sad, not anger expression, in response to goal blockage, are differentially influenced by children's gender.
婴儿及其母亲参与了一项关于婴儿目标受阻反应后遗症的纵向研究。四个月大的婴儿参与了一项标准的应急学习/目标受阻程序,在此过程中,对受阻时愤怒和悲伤的面部表情进行了编码。当婴儿12个月和20个月大时,母亲们完成了一份关于孩子发脾气情况的问卷。发脾气得分随年龄增长而增加,男孩比女孩更容易出现发脾气行为。四个月大时对目标受阻所表现出的愤怒与发脾气行为无关。悲伤表情存在性别交互作用。因目标受阻而表现出悲伤的女孩总发脾气得分低于男孩;除此之外没有差异。这些结果表明,因目标受阻而表现出悲伤而非愤怒表情的婴儿发脾气情况,受儿童性别的影响存在差异。