Home
Scholarly Works
Individual differences in emotional expression...
Journal article

Individual differences in emotional expression discrimination are associated with emotion label production in toddlers

Abstract

It is possible that the visual discrimination of emotion categories and emotion word vocabulary develop via common emotion-specific processes. In contrast, it is possible that they develop with vocabulary development more generally. This study contrasts these two possibilities. Twenty-three 26-month-olds participated in a visual perceptual discrimination task involving emotional facial expressions. After familiarization to a 100% happy face, toddlers were tested for their visual preference for a novel sad face in a side-by-side presentation paired with the familiar happy face. Parental report was used to quantify production of emotion words and vocabulary generally. Visual preference for the novel emotion (sad) in the discrimination task correlated with emotion word vocabulary size but not with overall vocabulary size.

Authors

Lee V; Besada M; Rutherford MD

Journal

European Journal of Developmental Psychology, Vol. 15, No. 5, pp. 506–516

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

September 3, 2018

DOI

10.1080/17405629.2017.1314214

ISSN

1740-5629

Contact the Experts team