Intxaustegi Alaitz, Serrat Elisabet, Amadó Anna, Sidera Francesc
Department of Psychology, Universitat de Girona, 17004 Girona, Spain.
Department of Psychology, Sociology and Social Work, Universitat de Lleida, 25001 Lleida, Spain.
Behav Sci (Basel). 2025 Aug 15;15(8):1106. doi: 10.3390/bs15081106.
The understanding of hidden emotions-situations in which individuals deliberately express an emotion different from what they genuinely feel-is a key skill in theory of mind (ToM) development. This ability allows children to reason about discrepancies between internal emotional states and external expressions and is closely tied to linguistic development, particularly vocabulary related to mental states, which supports complex emotional reasoning. Children who are deaf or hard of hearing (DHH), especially those born to hearing non-signing families and raised in oral language environments, may face challenges in early language exposure. This can impact the development of social and emotional skills, including the ability to understand hidden emotions. This study compares the understanding of hidden emotions in hearing children ( = 59) and DHH children ( = 44) aged 7-12 years. All children were educated in spoken language environments; none of the DHH participants had native exposure to sign language. Participants completed a hidden emotions task involving illustrated stories where a character showed a certain emotion in front of two observers, only one of whom was aware of the character's true emotional state. The task assessed children's understanding of the character's emotional state as well as their ability to reason about the impact of hiding emotions on the beliefs of the observers. The results showed that the hearing children outperformed their DHH peers in understanding hidden emotions. This difference was not attributed to hearing status per se but to language use. Specifically, children's spontaneous use of cognitive verbs (e.g., think or know) in their explanations predicted task performance across the groups, emphasizing the role of mental state language in emotional reasoning. These findings underscore the importance of early and accessible language exposure in supporting the emotional and social cognitive development of DHH children.
理解隐藏情绪(即个体故意表达与真实感受不同的情绪的情况)是心理理论(ToM)发展中的一项关键技能。这种能力使儿童能够推断内部情绪状态与外部表达之间的差异,并且与语言发展密切相关,特别是与心理状态相关的词汇,这有助于进行复杂的情绪推理。失聪或听力障碍(DHH)儿童,尤其是那些出生于听力正常但不会手语的家庭并在口语环境中长大的儿童,在早期语言接触方面可能会面临挑战。这可能会影响社交和情感技能的发展,包括理解隐藏情绪的能力。本研究比较了7至12岁的听力正常儿童(n = 59)和DHH儿童(n = 44)对隐藏情绪的理解。所有儿童都在口语环境中接受教育;DHH参与者中没有一个人有过接触手语的经历。参与者完成了一项涉及插图故事的隐藏情绪任务,故事中一个角色在两个观察者面前表现出某种情绪,其中只有一个观察者知道该角色的真实情绪状态。该任务评估了儿童对角色情绪状态的理解以及他们推断隐藏情绪对观察者信念影响的能力。结果表明,听力正常的儿童在理解隐藏情绪方面优于他们的DHH同龄人。这种差异并非归因于听力本身,而是归因于语言使用。具体而言,儿童在解释中自发使用认知动词(例如,认为或知道)预测了各组的任务表现,强调了心理状态语言在情绪推理中的作用。这些发现强调了早期且易于接触的语言接触在支持DHH儿童的情感和社会认知发展方面的重要性。