Baby, you light-up my face: culture-general physiological responses to infants and culture-specific cognitive judgements of adults.

Infants universally elicit in adults a set of solicitous behaviors that are evolutionarily important for the survival of the species. However, exposure, experience, and prejudice appear to govern adults' social choice and ingroup attitudes towards other adults. In the current study, physiologic...

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Main Authors: Gianluca Esposito, Jun Nakazawa, Shota Ogawa, Rita Stival, Akiko Kawashima, Diane L Putnick, Marc H Bornstein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4212966?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e1482a8c7060473ea3cfc97b576c964f2020-11-25T01:56:49ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01910e10670510.1371/journal.pone.0106705Baby, you light-up my face: culture-general physiological responses to infants and culture-specific cognitive judgements of adults.Gianluca EspositoJun NakazawaShota OgawaRita StivalAkiko KawashimaDiane L PutnickMarc H BornsteinInfants universally elicit in adults a set of solicitous behaviors that are evolutionarily important for the survival of the species. However, exposure, experience, and prejudice appear to govern adults' social choice and ingroup attitudes towards other adults. In the current study, physiological arousal and behavioral judgments were assessed while adults processed unfamiliar infant and adult faces of ingroup vs. outgroup members in two contrasting cultures, Japan and Italy. Physiological arousal was investigated using the novel technique of infrared thermography and behavioral judgments using ratings. We uncovered a dissociation between physiological and behavioral responses. At the physiological level, both Japanese and Italian adults showed significant activation (increase of facial temperature) for both ingroup and outgroup infant faces. At the behavioral level, both Japanese and Italian adults showed significant preferences for ingroup adults. Arousal responses to infants appear to be mediated by the autonomic nervous system and are not dependent on direct caregiving exposure, but behavioral responses appear to be mediated by higher-order cognitive processing based on social acceptance and cultural exposure.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4212966?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gianluca Esposito
Jun Nakazawa
Shota Ogawa
Rita Stival
Akiko Kawashima
Diane L Putnick
Marc H Bornstein
spellingShingle Gianluca Esposito
Jun Nakazawa
Shota Ogawa
Rita Stival
Akiko Kawashima
Diane L Putnick
Marc H Bornstein
Baby, you light-up my face: culture-general physiological responses to infants and culture-specific cognitive judgements of adults.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Gianluca Esposito
Jun Nakazawa
Shota Ogawa
Rita Stival
Akiko Kawashima
Diane L Putnick
Marc H Bornstein
author_sort Gianluca Esposito
title Baby, you light-up my face: culture-general physiological responses to infants and culture-specific cognitive judgements of adults.
title_short Baby, you light-up my face: culture-general physiological responses to infants and culture-specific cognitive judgements of adults.
title_full Baby, you light-up my face: culture-general physiological responses to infants and culture-specific cognitive judgements of adults.
title_fullStr Baby, you light-up my face: culture-general physiological responses to infants and culture-specific cognitive judgements of adults.
title_full_unstemmed Baby, you light-up my face: culture-general physiological responses to infants and culture-specific cognitive judgements of adults.
title_sort baby, you light-up my face: culture-general physiological responses to infants and culture-specific cognitive judgements of adults.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Infants universally elicit in adults a set of solicitous behaviors that are evolutionarily important for the survival of the species. However, exposure, experience, and prejudice appear to govern adults' social choice and ingroup attitudes towards other adults. In the current study, physiological arousal and behavioral judgments were assessed while adults processed unfamiliar infant and adult faces of ingroup vs. outgroup members in two contrasting cultures, Japan and Italy. Physiological arousal was investigated using the novel technique of infrared thermography and behavioral judgments using ratings. We uncovered a dissociation between physiological and behavioral responses. At the physiological level, both Japanese and Italian adults showed significant activation (increase of facial temperature) for both ingroup and outgroup infant faces. At the behavioral level, both Japanese and Italian adults showed significant preferences for ingroup adults. Arousal responses to infants appear to be mediated by the autonomic nervous system and are not dependent on direct caregiving exposure, but behavioral responses appear to be mediated by higher-order cognitive processing based on social acceptance and cultural exposure.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4212966?pdf=render
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