A story superiority effect for disgust,fear, embarrassment,and pride |
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Authors: | Nicole L. Nelson Kate Hudspeth James A. Russell |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Brock University, , St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada;2. Department of Psychology, Boston College, , Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, USA |
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Abstract: | Past studies found that, for preschoolers, a story specifying a situational cause and behavioural consequence is a better cue to fear and disgust than is the facial expression of those two emotions, but the facial expressions used were static. Two studies (Study 1: N = 68, 36–68 months; Study 2: N = 72, 49–90 months) tested whether this effect could be reversed when the expressions were dynamic and included facial, postural, and vocal cues. Children freely labelled emotions in three conditions: story, still face, and dynamic expression. Story remained a better cue than still face or dynamic expression for fear and disgust and also for the later emerging emotions of embarrassment and pride. |
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