Abstract
It was hypothesized the mothers' predictions of their caregiving interventions would be differentially influenced by infants' facial expressions of sadness, anger, and physical distress. Mothers viewed slides of infants whose facial displays had first been objectively classified with the Maximally Discriminative Facial Movement Coding System (Izard, 1979). Mothers imagined their infants showing similar expressions while scaling their own tendencies to respond with a number of specific caregiving and socializing interventions and affective reactions. Multivariate ANOVAs showed that the mothers' predictions differed for the three types of negative display. In an emotion decoding task, mothers' responses did not differ as a function of the infants' sex. The patterns of decoded emotions were most similar between physical distress and anger expressions, and least similar between physical distress and sadness expressions. Generally, the findings supported the hypothesis that the negative facial displayes signaled different affective states and had differential motivational effects on the mothers.
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This research was supported by National Science Foundation Grant No. BNS 78-04236. We are grateful to Elizabeth A. Hembree for coding the stimulus materials and for assistance in final revisions of the manuscript, and to Gail M. Schwartz for facilitating contacts with subjects.
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Huebner, R.R., Izard, C.E. Mothers' responses to infants' facial expressions of sadness, anger, and physical distress. Motiv Emot 12, 185–196 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00992173
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00992173