Creation and validation of the Picture-Set of Young Children’s Affective Facial Expressions (PSYCAFE)

Franz, Matthias and Müller, Tobias and Hahn, Sina and Lundqvist, Daniel and Rampoldt, Dirk and Westermann, Jan-Frederik and Nordmann, Marc A. and Schäfer, Ralf and Li, Zezhi (2021) Creation and validation of the Picture-Set of Young Children’s Affective Facial Expressions (PSYCAFE). PLOS ONE, 16 (12). e0260871. ISSN 1932-6203

[thumbnail of journal.pone.0260871.pdf] Text
journal.pone.0260871.pdf - Published Version

Download (2MB)

Abstract

The immediate detection and correct processing of affective facial expressions are one of the most important competences in social interaction and thus a main subject in emotion and affect research. Generally, studies in these research domains, use pictures of adults who display affective facial expressions as experimental stimuli. However, for studies investigating developmental psychology and attachment behaviour it is necessary to use age-matched stimuli, where it is children that display affective expressions. PSYCAFE represents a newly developed picture-set of children’s faces. It includes reference portraits of girls and boys aged 4 to 6 years averaged digitally from different individual pictures, that were categorized to six basic affects (fear, disgust, happiness, sadness, anger and surprise) plus a neutral facial expression by cluster analysis. This procedure led to deindividualized and affect prototypical portraits. Individual affect expressive portraits of adults from an already validated picture-set (KDEF) were used in a similar way to create affect prototypical images also of adults. The stimulus set has been validated on human observers and entail emotion recognition accuracy rates and scores for intensity, authenticity and likeability ratings of the specific affect displayed. Moreover, the stimuli have also been characterized by the iMotions Facial Expression Analysis Module, providing additional data on probability values representing the likelihood that the stimuli depict the expected affect. Finally, the validation data from human observers and iMotions are compared to data on facial mimicry of healthy adults in response to these portraits, measured by facial EMG (m. zygomaticus major and m. corrugator supercilii).

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Oalibrary Press > Social Sciences and Humanities
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 20 Mar 2023 05:03
Last Modified: 27 Feb 2024 04:16
URI: http://asian.go4publish.com/id/eprint/1043

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item