1995
DOI: 10.2307/1131909
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Frontal Activation Asymmetry and Social Competence at Four Years of Age

Abstract: The pattern of frontal activation as measured by the ongoing electroencephalogram (EEG) may be a marker for individual differences in infant and adult disposition to respond with either positive or negative affect. We studied 48 4-year-old children who were first observed in same-sex quartets during free-play sessions, while making speeches, and during a ticket-sorting task. Social and interactive behaviors were coded from these sessions. Each child was subsequently seen 2 weeks later when EEG was recorded whi… Show more

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Cited by 216 publications
(158 citation statements)
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“…Higher right resting asymmetry had already been found in children who exhibited inhibited behaviour in social interactions, whereas social competence was related to greater left activity (Fox et al, 1995). These patterns could be paired with the present trends in adult attachment, considering the influence of internal models on social behaviour: avoidant children are more likely to retire from social interactions, whereas preoccupied children could display social anxiety and timidity when facing unfamiliar or novel places.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 63%
“…Higher right resting asymmetry had already been found in children who exhibited inhibited behaviour in social interactions, whereas social competence was related to greater left activity (Fox et al, 1995). These patterns could be paired with the present trends in adult attachment, considering the influence of internal models on social behaviour: avoidant children are more likely to retire from social interactions, whereas preoccupied children could display social anxiety and timidity when facing unfamiliar or novel places.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 63%
“…Both behavioral [e.g., reticence with peers (Rubin et al, 2002)] and physiological [e.g., right frontal EEG asymmetry (Fox et al, 1995)] response profiles documented in inhibited children early in life suggest that this form of temperament is characterized by a stable, general hypersensitivity to environmental stimuli that has typically been understood in terms of enhanced reactivity of the fear circuitry of the brain to novel stimuli (Kagan, 1994;Schwartz et al, 2003;Fox et al, 2005). The main finding from the current study extends this characterization by demonstrating that an inhibited temperament is associated with enhanced neural sensitivity in brain regions that facilitate motivated behavior in response to nonsocial reward stimuli.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Shyness is characterized by active avoidance of social contact (Rubin, Stewart, & Coplan, 1995) due to fear of social scrutiny and embarrassment, feelings of negative self-worth (Crozier, 1981), low self-esteem (Schmidt & Fox, 1995), anxiety (Hirshfeld et al, 1992), and occasionally depression (Schmidt & Fox, 1995). Some theorists explain the etiology of shyness from a trait perspective.…”
Section: Definition and Conceptualizationmentioning
confidence: 99%