[Smiling of preschool children in performance-oriented situations: assessment of the emotional significance in relation to other facial expressions]

Z Exp Angew Psychol. 1990;37(4):660-78.
[Article in German]

Abstract

The goal of the reported experiment was to study how adults judge the meaning of different kinds of smiling and laughing by preschool children, and the role played by other facial movements in determining this meaning. Videotapes and photographs of spontaneous facial expressions of children in a play situation served as stimuli. The results show that different kinds of smiling were judged by the adult subjects as being significantly different from each other. In order to find subgroups within the stimuli, cluster analyses were performed, and the resulting clusters indicated different mixtures of positive and negative emotions contained within the pictures. Regression analyses showed that the adults' judgements were dependent on the number of indicators for positive and negative emotions which could be seen in the pictures. The most important indicator movement for the judged strength of the positive emotion expressed in the smile was the raising of the cheeks and, for negative emotions, the lowering of the lip corners. The significance of the components of the expressions as well as the strength of the expressed emotion were, however, dependent on the mode of presentation (video/photo).

Publication types

  • English Abstract

MeSH terms

  • Achievement*
  • Attitude*
  • Child, Preschool
  • Emotions*
  • Facial Expression
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Laughter*
  • Male
  • Role Playing
  • Smiling*