ID | 106045 |
Author |
Naruse, Susumu
Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Rehabilitation, Kobe International University
Hashimoto, Toshiaki
Department of Pediatrics, Japanese Red Cross Tokushima Hinomine Rehabilitation Center for People with Disabilities
Mori, Kenji
Department of Child Health & Nursing, Institute of Health Biosciences, the University of Tokushima Graduate School
Tokushima University Educator and Researcher Directory
KAKEN Search Researchers
Tsuda, Yoshimi
Department of Special Needs Education, Naruto University of Education
Takahara, Mitsue
Department of Special Needs Education, Naruto University of Education
Kagami, Shoji
Department of Pediatrics, Institute of Health Biosciences, the University of Tokushima Graduate School
Tokushima University Educator and Researcher Directory
KAKEN Search Researchers
|
Keywords | school-age children
facial expression recognition
eye-track
|
Content Type |
Journal Article
|
Description | Purpose : Facial expressions hold abundant information and play a central part in communication. In daily life, we must construct amicable interpersonal relationships by communicating through verbal and nonverbal behaviors. While school-age is a period of rapid social growth, few studies exist that study developmental changes in facial expression recognition during this age. This study investigated developmental changes in facial expression recognition by examining observers’ gaze on others’ expressions. Subjects : 87 school-age children from first to sixth grade (41 boys, 46 girls). Method : The Tobii T60 Eye-tracker(Tobii Technologies, Sweden) was used to gauge eye movement during a task of matching pre-instructed emotion words and facial expressions images (neutral, angry, happy, surprised, sad, disgusted) presented on a monitor fixed at a distance of 50 cm. Results : In the task of matching the six facial expression images and emotion words, the mid- and higher-grade children answered more accurately than the lower-grade children in matching four expressions, excluding neutral and happy. For fixation time and fixation count, the lower-grade children scored lower than other grade children, gazing on all facial expressions significantly fewer times and for shorter periods. Conclusion : It is guessed that the stage from lower grades to middle grades is a turning point in facial recognition.
|
Journal Title |
The journal of medical investigation : JMI
|
ISSN | 13431420
|
NCID | AA11166929
|
Volume | 60
|
Issue | 1-2
|
Start Page | 114
|
End Page | 120
|
Sort Key | 114
|
Published Date | 2013-02
|
EDB ID | |
FullText File | |
language |
eng
|
TextVersion |
Publisher
|
departments |
Medical Sciences
|