SensoriMotor, Affective and Social Development Laboratory, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, 40 bd du Pont d'Arve, 1205, Geneva, Switzerland.
The National Center of Competence in Research "Affective Sciences - Emotions in Individual Behaviour and Social Processes" (NCCR Affective Sciences), University of Geneva, 40 bd du Pont d'Arve, 1205, Geneva, Switzerland.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2018 Apr;25(2):483-497. doi: 10.3758/s13423-017-1338-0.
Facial expressions of emotion are nonverbal behaviors that allow us to interact efficiently in social life and respond to events affecting our welfare. This article reviews 21 studies, published between 1932 and 2015, examining the production of facial expressions of emotion by blind people. It particularly discusses the impact of visual experience on the development of this behavior from birth to adulthood. After a discussion of three methodological considerations, the review of studies reveals that blind subjects demonstrate differing capacities for producing spontaneous expressions and voluntarily posed expressions. Seventeen studies provided evidence that blind and sighted spontaneously produce the same pattern of facial expressions, even if some variations can be found, reflecting facial and body movements specific to blindness or differences in intensity and control of emotions in some specific contexts. This suggests that lack of visual experience seems to not have a major impact when this behavior is generated spontaneously in real emotional contexts. In contrast, eight studies examining voluntary expressions indicate that blind individuals have difficulty posing emotional expressions. The opportunity for prior visual observation seems to affect performance in this case. Finally, we discuss three new directions for research to provide additional and strong evidence for the debate regarding the innate or the culture-constant learning character of the production of emotional facial expressions by blind individuals: the link between perception and production of facial expressions, the impact of display rules in the absence of vision, and the role of other channels in expression of emotions in the context of blindness.
面部表情是一种非言语行为,它使我们能够在社会生活中有效地互动,并对影响我们福祉的事件做出反应。本文综述了 21 项研究,这些研究发表于 1932 年至 2015 年之间,考察了盲人产生情绪面部表情的情况。特别讨论了从出生到成年期视觉经验对这种行为发展的影响。在讨论了三个方法学考虑因素之后,对这些研究的回顾表明,盲人在自发表达和自愿表达方面表现出不同的能力。有 17 项研究提供了证据,表明盲人在自发产生面部表情时与视力正常者表现出相同的模式,尽管可能存在一些差异,这反映了失明特有的面部和身体运动,或者在某些特定情境中情绪的强度和控制存在差异。这表明,当这种行为在真实的情感情境中自发产生时,缺乏视觉经验似乎没有重大影响。相比之下,八项研究考察了自愿表达,表明盲人在摆出情绪表情时遇到困难。在这种情况下,事先进行视觉观察的机会似乎会影响表现。最后,我们讨论了三个新的研究方向,以提供更多有力的证据,支持关于盲人产生情绪面部表情是天生的还是文化习得的争论:面部表情感知与产生之间的联系,在没有视觉的情况下表现规则的影响,以及在失明背景下其他渠道在表达情感中的作用。