DECODING OF CHILDREN'S NONVERBAL FACIAL EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTION BY PARENTS AND NONPARENTS

Parents' abilities to decode their children's nonverbal expressions of four affects (happiness, sadness, fear, and anger) were contrasted with the decoding abilities of a matched group of nonparents. No differences were found between parents' and nonparents' decoding abilities. H...

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Main Author: FEINMAN, JOEL ALAN
Language:ENG
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 1982
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI8229547
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spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-dissertations-72772020-12-02T14:26:56Z DECODING OF CHILDREN'S NONVERBAL FACIAL EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTION BY PARENTS AND NONPARENTS FEINMAN, JOEL ALAN Parents' abilities to decode their children's nonverbal expressions of four affects (happiness, sadness, fear, and anger) were contrasted with the decoding abilities of a matched group of nonparents. No differences were found between parents' and nonparents' decoding abilities. However, decoding abilities were found to vary as a function of the sex of the encoding child and, the type of affect expressed. Female children were found to be more accurate encoders of spontaneous affective expressions than male children. Of the four affects studied, communication accuracy was found to be highest for expressions of sadness and lowest for expressions of anger. Several hypotheses, including the differential effect of socialized display rules on male and female children, are discussed to explain the results. 1982-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI8229547 Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest ENG ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Psychotherapy
collection NDLTD
language ENG
sources NDLTD
topic Psychotherapy
spellingShingle Psychotherapy
FEINMAN, JOEL ALAN
DECODING OF CHILDREN'S NONVERBAL FACIAL EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTION BY PARENTS AND NONPARENTS
description Parents' abilities to decode their children's nonverbal expressions of four affects (happiness, sadness, fear, and anger) were contrasted with the decoding abilities of a matched group of nonparents. No differences were found between parents' and nonparents' decoding abilities. However, decoding abilities were found to vary as a function of the sex of the encoding child and, the type of affect expressed. Female children were found to be more accurate encoders of spontaneous affective expressions than male children. Of the four affects studied, communication accuracy was found to be highest for expressions of sadness and lowest for expressions of anger. Several hypotheses, including the differential effect of socialized display rules on male and female children, are discussed to explain the results.
author FEINMAN, JOEL ALAN
author_facet FEINMAN, JOEL ALAN
author_sort FEINMAN, JOEL ALAN
title DECODING OF CHILDREN'S NONVERBAL FACIAL EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTION BY PARENTS AND NONPARENTS
title_short DECODING OF CHILDREN'S NONVERBAL FACIAL EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTION BY PARENTS AND NONPARENTS
title_full DECODING OF CHILDREN'S NONVERBAL FACIAL EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTION BY PARENTS AND NONPARENTS
title_fullStr DECODING OF CHILDREN'S NONVERBAL FACIAL EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTION BY PARENTS AND NONPARENTS
title_full_unstemmed DECODING OF CHILDREN'S NONVERBAL FACIAL EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTION BY PARENTS AND NONPARENTS
title_sort decoding of children's nonverbal facial expressions of emotion by parents and nonparents
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 1982
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI8229547
work_keys_str_mv AT feinmanjoelalan decodingofchildrensnonverbalfacialexpressionsofemotionbyparentsandnonparents
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