Infants' ability to process others' emotional expressions is fundamental for their social development. While infants' processing of emotions expressed by faces and speech has been more extensively investigated, less is known about how infants process non-verbal vocalizations of emotions. Here, we recorded frontal N100, P200, and LPC event-related potentials (ERPs) from 8-month-old infants listening to sounds of other infants crying, laughing, and coughing. Infants' temperament was measured via parental report. Results showed that processing of emotional information from non-verbal vocalizations was associated with more negative N100 and greater LPC amplitudes for peer's crying sounds relative to positive and neutral sounds. Temper...
During the first year of life, infants’ capacities for face processing are shaped by experience with...
The present pair of studies used hypotheses derived from the Polyvagal Theory (Porges, 2007; 2011) t...
Previous work suggests that infant cry perception is supported by an evolutionary old neural network...
Infants' ability to process others' emotional expressions is fundamental for their social developme...
Abstract Infants’ ability to process others’ emotional expressions is fundamental for their social d...
Responding to others’ emotional expressions is an essential and early developing social skill among ...
The current thesis examined the processes involved in the generation of empathy in infancy. This the...
Infants are sensitive to and converge emotionally with peers’ distress. It is unclear whether these ...
This paper examined two hypotheses; (1) infants produce voices necessary for emotional communication...
Infants become sensitive to emotion expressions early in the 1st year and such sensitivity is likely...
Making sense of emotions manifesting in human voice is an important social skill which is influenced...
Purpose: Interacting with others by reading their emotional expressions is an essential social skill...
This PhD investigates the perception of laughter and crying, two non verbal expressions of emotion, ...
An early understanding of others’ vocal emotions provides infants with a distinct advantage for elic...
The present study sought to discover the age at which infants realize that their vocalizations may b...
During the first year of life, infants’ capacities for face processing are shaped by experience with...
The present pair of studies used hypotheses derived from the Polyvagal Theory (Porges, 2007; 2011) t...
Previous work suggests that infant cry perception is supported by an evolutionary old neural network...
Infants' ability to process others' emotional expressions is fundamental for their social developme...
Abstract Infants’ ability to process others’ emotional expressions is fundamental for their social d...
Responding to others’ emotional expressions is an essential and early developing social skill among ...
The current thesis examined the processes involved in the generation of empathy in infancy. This the...
Infants are sensitive to and converge emotionally with peers’ distress. It is unclear whether these ...
This paper examined two hypotheses; (1) infants produce voices necessary for emotional communication...
Infants become sensitive to emotion expressions early in the 1st year and such sensitivity is likely...
Making sense of emotions manifesting in human voice is an important social skill which is influenced...
Purpose: Interacting with others by reading their emotional expressions is an essential social skill...
This PhD investigates the perception of laughter and crying, two non verbal expressions of emotion, ...
An early understanding of others’ vocal emotions provides infants with a distinct advantage for elic...
The present study sought to discover the age at which infants realize that their vocalizations may b...
During the first year of life, infants’ capacities for face processing are shaped by experience with...
The present pair of studies used hypotheses derived from the Polyvagal Theory (Porges, 2007; 2011) t...
Previous work suggests that infant cry perception is supported by an evolutionary old neural network...