Week 1
Why and How We Study Socio-Emotional Processing Development
Time: 6th May
14:00 CEST
It
might seem that skill in processing of faces and voices, as well as the
emotional expressions they convey, is a simple matter. We analyse faces and
voices along many different metrics everyday without so much as a second
thought. However, human faces and voices are uniquely richly communicative, and
upon closer examination, it seems as though these skills we take for granted
are in fact not present at birth. The journey to typical adult processing of
facial and vocal expressions is a protracted one, and there are many different
points at which deficits can (and often do) emerge. Impairments in these early
building blocks of more sophisticated social processing can have wide-reaching
implications for mature functioning. So, now knowing the reasons for studying
these processes, the question of ‘how’ emerges—adult and child paradigms cannot
work with preverbal, largely immobile infants, and so psychologists have had to
construct many innovative ways to study this age-group. We will explore the
behavioural and physiological methods that have been employed, especially EEG
and ERP. The group-work component for this workshop will be a study-design
task.
Workshop
content
- We will address the question of why it is useful to study socio-emotional skills, especially emotional expression processing
- We will discuss why it is important to understand the developmental trajectory of these skills.
- We will discuss methods for studying these processes (behavioural and physiological) in infants and young children.
- We will introduce the basics of EEG and how to understand the results.
- We will discuss which EEG and ERP components are relevant to the literature here.
- Students will be split into groups and asked to design a study in this field.
Reading
List
Kret, M. E.,
Prochazkova, E., Sterck, E. H., & Clay, Z. (2020). Emotional expressions in
human and non-human great apes. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.
Bryant, G.,
& Barrett, H. C. (2008). Vocal emotion recognition across disparate
cultures. Journal of Cognition and Culture, 8(1-2), 135-148.
Poulin-Dubois,
D., Hastings, P. D., Chiarella, S. S., Geangu, E., Hauf, P., Ruel, A., &
Johnson, A. (2018). The eyes know it: Toddlers' visual scanning of sad faces is
predicted by their theory of mind skills. PloS one, 13(12), e0208524.
For an
Overview of Methodologies Used
EEG/ERP: Sur, S., & Sinha, V. K. (2009).
Event-related potential: An overview. Industrial psychiatry journal, 18(1), 70.
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