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Darwin's Duchenne: Eye constriction during infant joy and distress
Authors
A Fogel
A Ortony
+36 more
ACdC Williams
C Cortes
CA Smith
CE Izard
Corrado Sinigaglia
D Matsumoto
Daniel S. Messinger
Devon N. Gangi
DS Messinger
DS Messinger
DS Messinger
DS Messinger
E Tronick
H Aviezer
H Oster
H Oster
J Mesman
Jeffrey F. Cohn
JM Fernández-Dols
JM Susskind
KD Craig
KM Prkachin
KR Scherer
LA Camras
LA Camras
LB Segal
M Belkin
MG Frank
Mohammad H. Mahoor
NA Fox
P Ekman
RV Grunau
S Baker
SK Ahola
Whitney I. Mattson
Z Ambadar
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Darwin proposed that smiles with eye constriction (Duchenne smiles) index strong positive emotion in infants, while cry-faces with eye constriction index strong negative emotion. Research has supported Darwin's proposal with respect to smiling, but there has been little parallel research on cry-faces (open-mouth expressions with lateral lip stretching). To investigate the possibility that eye constriction indexes the affective intensity of positive and negative emotions, we first conducted the Face-to-Face/Still-Face (FFSF) procedure at 6 months. In the FFSF, three minutes of naturalistic infant-parent play interaction (which elicits more smiles than cry-faces) are followed by two minutes in which the parent holds an unresponsive still-face (which elicits more cry-faces than smiles). Consistent with Darwin's proposal, eye constriction was associated with stronger smiling and with stronger cry-faces. In addition, the proportion of smiles with eye constriction was higher during the positive-emotion eliciting play episode than during the still-face. In parallel, the proportion of cry-faces with eye constriction was higher during the negative-emotion eliciting still-face than during play. These results are consonant with the hypothesis that eye constriction indexes the affective intensity of both positive and negative facial configurations. A preponderance of eye constriction during cry-faces was observed in a second elicitor of intense negative emotion, vaccination injections, at both 6 and 12 months of age. The results support the existence of a Duchenne distress expression that parallels the more well-known Duchenne smile. This suggests that eye constriction-the Duchenne marker-has a systematic association with early facial expressions of intense negative and positive emotion. © 2013 Mattson et al
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