2021
DOI: 10.1111/infa.12426
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Infants scan static and dynamic facial expressions differently

Abstract: How humans perceive facial expressions is an enduring question (see Darwin, 1873;Wundt, 1909). Using static stimuli such as the now-classic "Ekman faces" (Ekman & Friesen, 1976), much has been learned about its developmental trajectory. Infants can discriminate between certain static facial expressions from birth (Farroni et al., 2007;Field et al., 1982), and by seven months can identify many of the six "core" expressions (Ekman, 1993;Ekman et al., 1987) within discreet emotion categories (Kotsoni et al., 2001… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 87 publications
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“…This prior work suggests that infants rapidly develop perceptual categories of emotion, and can categorise even highly similar facial configurations of the same valence and level of arousal (e.g., anger and disgust; Ruba et al, 2017). Infant eyetracking also suggests that even young infants show adult-like facial scanning Prunty et al, 2021;Soussignan et al, 2017), and look toward regions diagnostic for emotion recognition (see Jack et al, 2014;Smith et al, 2005). These studies, however, are not designed to determine if infants are receptive to the emotional content of facial configurations, or whether they are merely sensitive to differences in low-level perceptual information (see Barrett et al, 2019;Nelson, 1987).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…This prior work suggests that infants rapidly develop perceptual categories of emotion, and can categorise even highly similar facial configurations of the same valence and level of arousal (e.g., anger and disgust; Ruba et al, 2017). Infant eyetracking also suggests that even young infants show adult-like facial scanning Prunty et al, 2021;Soussignan et al, 2017), and look toward regions diagnostic for emotion recognition (see Jack et al, 2014;Smith et al, 2005). These studies, however, are not designed to determine if infants are receptive to the emotional content of facial configurations, or whether they are merely sensitive to differences in low-level perceptual information (see Barrett et al, 2019;Nelson, 1987).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Ekman & Friesen, 1976). Expression stimuli were validated by 51 adult observers (Prunty et al, 2021), and received high recognition accuracy scores (M = 84.57%, SD = 14.99%), and representativeness ratings (out of 5: M = 3.62, SD = .38). Discrete gaze-contingent boundaries for the eye region were defined individually for each face (all 6.8˚x 2.83˚).…”
Section: Stimulimentioning
confidence: 99%
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