The present study aims to explore the influence of facial emotional expressions on pre-scholars' identity recognition was analyzed using a two-alternative forced-choice matching task. A decrement was observed in children's performance with emotional faces compared with neutral faces, both when a happy emotional expression remained unchanged between the target face and the test faces and when the expression changed from happy to neutral or from neutral to happy between the target and the test faces (Experiment 1). Negative emotional expressions (i.e. fear and anger) also interfered with children's identity recognition (Experiment 2). Obtained evidence suggests that in preschool-age children, facial emotional expressions are processed in interaction with, rather than independently from, the encoding of facial identity information. The results are discussed in relationship with relevant research conducted with adults and children.

Brenna, V., Turati, C., Montirosso, R., MACCHI CASSIA, V. (2015). The interference effect of emotional expressions on facial identity recognition in preschool-aged children. THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 12(4), 443-458 [10.1080/17405629.2015.1047339].

The interference effect of emotional expressions on facial identity recognition in preschool-aged children

BRENNA, VIOLA
Primo
;
TURATI, CHIARA
Secondo
;
MACCHI CASSIA, VIOLA MARINA
Ultimo
2015

Abstract

The present study aims to explore the influence of facial emotional expressions on pre-scholars' identity recognition was analyzed using a two-alternative forced-choice matching task. A decrement was observed in children's performance with emotional faces compared with neutral faces, both when a happy emotional expression remained unchanged between the target face and the test faces and when the expression changed from happy to neutral or from neutral to happy between the target and the test faces (Experiment 1). Negative emotional expressions (i.e. fear and anger) also interfered with children's identity recognition (Experiment 2). Obtained evidence suggests that in preschool-age children, facial emotional expressions are processed in interaction with, rather than independently from, the encoding of facial identity information. The results are discussed in relationship with relevant research conducted with adults and children.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Children; Emotion; Face processing; Identity recognition; Preschool-age;
Children; Emotion; Face processing; Identity recognition; Preschool-age; Developmental and Educational Psychology; Social Psychology
English
2015
12
4
443
458
none
Brenna, V., Turati, C., Montirosso, R., MACCHI CASSIA, V. (2015). The interference effect of emotional expressions on facial identity recognition in preschool-aged children. THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 12(4), 443-458 [10.1080/17405629.2015.1047339].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/95999
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