Abstract
Adult judges were presented with videotape segments showing an infant displaying facial configurations hypothesized to express discomfort/pain, anger, or sadness according to differential emotions theory (Izard, Dougherty, & Hembree, 1983). The segments also included the infant's nonfacial behavior and aspects of the situational context. Judges rated the segments using a set of emotion terms or a set of activity terms. Results showed that judges perceived the discomfort/pain and anger segments as involving one or more negative emotions not predicted by differential emotions theory. The sadness segments were perceived as involving relatively little emotion overall. Body activity accompanying the discomfort/pain and anger configurations was judged to be more jerky and active than body activity accompanying the sadness configurations. The sadness segments were accompanied by relatively little body movement overall. The results thus fail to conform to the predictions of differential emotions theory but provide information that may contribute to the development of a theory of infant expressive behavior.
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This article is based on the second author's master's thesis. The authors thank Dennis Ross for his expert assistance in the data analyses.
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Camras, L.A., Sullivan, J. & Michel, G. Do infants express discrete emotions? Adult judgments of facial, vocal, and body actions. J Nonverbal Behav 17, 171–186 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00986118
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00986118