Bormann-Kischkel C
Eur Arch Psychiatry Neurol Sci. 1986;236(1):17-20. doi: 10.1007/BF00641052.
The human face provides important cues for recognition of both individuals and emotions. A card-sorting test was devised for assessing which aspects of a face are attended to primarily. The subjects were 21 5-year-old children and 18 psychology students. The task required a choice between person identity and an irrelevant aspect (hairstyle); person identity and facial expression (emotions); and as a control condition, complex visual stimuli without social meaning (form and colour). No group differences emerged with the non-social stimuli, ruling out differences between children and adults in general sorting strategies. The two groups processed non-emotional facial stimuli differently, with the children showing "mixed" sorting behaviour, and the students usually making choices based on person identity. This can be explained by different processing strategies. However, when person identity and facial expressions were the competing dimensions in the card-sorting task, both groups showed a preference for the facial expression. It is argued that this reflects the great importance of emotional signals for both children and adults. The relevance of this finding for disturbed development is discussed.
人类的面孔为识别个体和情绪提供了重要线索。设计了一项卡片分类测试来评估面孔的哪些方面是人们主要关注的。受试者包括21名5岁儿童和18名心理学专业学生。该任务要求在人物身份与不相关方面(发型)之间进行选择;人物身份与面部表情(情绪)之间进行选择;以及作为对照条件,选择没有社会意义的复杂视觉刺激(形状和颜色)。在非社会性刺激方面未出现组间差异,排除了儿童和成年人在一般分类策略上的差异。两组对非情绪化面部刺激的处理方式不同,儿童表现出“混合”分类行为,而学生通常根据人物身份进行选择。这可以用不同的处理策略来解释。然而,当人物身份和面部表情在卡片分类任务中成为相互竞争的维度时,两组都表现出对面部表情的偏好。有人认为,这反映了情绪信号对儿童和成年人都非常重要。本文讨论了这一发现与发育障碍的相关性。