Skerry Amy E, Spelke Elizabeth S
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, 33 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, United States.
Cognition. 2014 Feb;130(2):204-16. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2013.11.002. Epub 2013 Dec 7.
Identifying the goal of another agent's action allows an observer to make inferences not only about the outcomes the agent will pursue in the future and the means to be deployed in a given context, but also about the emotional consequences of goal-related outcomes. While numerous studies have characterized the former abilities in infancy, expectations about emotions have gone relatively unexplored. Using a violation of expectation paradigm, we present infants with an agent who attains or fails to attain a demonstrated goal, and reacts with positive or negative affect. Across several studies, we find that infants' attention to a given emotional display differs depending on whether that reaction is congruent with the preceding goal outcome. Specifically, infants look longer at a negative emotional display when it follows a completed goal compared to when it follows a failed goal. The present results suggest that infants' goal representations support expectations not only about future actions but also about emotional reactions, and that infants in the first year of life can relate different emotional reactions to conditions that elicit them.
识别他人行为的目标,不仅能让观察者推断出该行为主体未来将追求的结果以及在特定情境中会采用的手段,还能推断出与目标相关结果的情感后果。虽然众多研究已对婴儿期的前两种能力进行了描述,但对情感方面的预期却相对缺乏探索。我们采用违背预期范式,向婴儿展示一个行为主体,该主体实现或未实现一个已展示的目标,并伴有积极或消极的情感反应。通过多项研究,我们发现婴儿对特定情感表现的关注程度,取决于该反应是否与先前的目标结果相符。具体而言,与目标未达成后出现消极情感表现相比,目标达成后出现消极情感表现时,婴儿注视的时间更长。目前的研究结果表明,婴儿的目标表征不仅支持对未来行为的预期,还支持对情感反应的预期,并且一岁婴儿能够将不同的情感反应与引发这些反应的条件联系起来。