Ruba Ashley L, Meltzoff Andrew N, Repacholi Betty M
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin, Waisman Center 399, 1500 Highland Avenue, Madison, WI 53705 USA.
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Affect Sci. 2020 Apr 16;1(1):4-19. doi: 10.1007/s42761-020-00005-x. eCollection 2020 Mar.
Predicting another person's emotional response to a situation is an important component of emotion concept understanding. However, little is known about the developmental origins of this ability. The current studies examine whether 10-month-olds expect facial configurations/vocalizations associated with negative emotions (e.g., anger, disgust) to be displayed after specific eliciting events. In Experiment 1, 10-month-olds ( = 60) were familiarized to an Emoter interacting with objects in a positive event () and a negative event (). Infants expected the Emoter to display a facial configuration associated with anger after the negative event, but did not expect the Emoter to display a facial configuration associated with happiness after the positive event. In Experiment 2, 10- and 14-month-olds ( = 120) expected the Emoter to display a facial configuration associated with anger, rather than one associated with disgust, after an "anger-eliciting" event (). However, only the 14-month-olds provided some evidence of linking a facial configuration associated with disgust, rather than one associated with anger, to a "disgust-eliciting event" (). Experiment 3 found that 10-month-olds ( = 60) did not expect an Emoter to display a facial configuration associated with anger after an "anger-eliciting" event involving an . Together, these experiments suggest that infants start to refine broad concepts of affect into more precise emotion concepts over the first 2 years of life, before learning emotion language. These findings are a first step toward addressing a long-standing theoretical debate in affective science about the nature of early emotion concepts.
预测他人对某种情境的情绪反应是理解情绪概念的一个重要组成部分。然而,对于这种能力的发展起源却知之甚少。当前的研究考察了10个月大的婴儿是否期望与负面情绪(如愤怒、厌恶)相关的面部表情/发声会在特定的引发事件之后出现。在实验1中,60名10个月大的婴儿先熟悉了一个情绪表达者在积极事件( )和消极事件( )中与物体互动的情景。婴儿期望情绪表达者在消极事件之后展现出与愤怒相关的面部表情,但并不期望情绪表达者在积极事件之后展现出与快乐相关的面部表情。在实验2中,120名10个月和14个月大的婴儿在一个“引发愤怒”的事件( )之后,期望情绪表达者展现出与愤怒相关的面部表情,而不是与厌恶相关的面部表情。然而,只有14个月大的婴儿提供了一些证据,表明他们将与厌恶相关而非与愤怒相关的面部表情与一个“引发厌恶的事件”( )联系起来。实验3发现,60名10个月大的婴儿在一个涉及 的“引发愤怒”的事件之后,并不期望情绪表达者展现出与愤怒相关的面部表情。总的来说,这些实验表明,婴儿在学习情绪语言之前,在生命的头两年里开始将宽泛的情感概念细化为更精确的情绪概念。这些发现是朝着解决情感科学中关于早期情绪概念本质的长期理论争论迈出的第一步。