Infant Pupil Diameter Changes in Response to Others' Positive and Negative Emotions

It has been suggested that infants resonate emotionally to others' positive and negative affect displays, and that these responses become stronger towards emotions with negative valence around the age of 12-months. In this study we measured 6- and 12-month-old infants' changes in pupil diameter when presented with the image and sound of peers experiencing happiness, distress and an emotionally neutral state. For all participants the perception of another's distress triggered larger pupil diameters. Perceiving other's happiness also induced larger pupil diameters but for shorter time intervals. Importantly, we also found evidence for an asymmetry in autonomous arousal towards positive versus negative emotional displays. Larger pupil sizes for another's distress compared to another's happiness were recorded shortly after stimulus onset for the older infants, and in a later time window for the 6-month-olds. These findings suggest that arousal responses for negative as well as for positive emotions are present in the second half of the first postnatal year. Importantly, an asymmetry with stronger responses for negative emotions seems to be already present at this age.

[1]  R. Blair Should Affective Arousal be Grounded in Perception-Action Coupling? , 2011 .

[2]  M. Hoffman,et al.  Empathy and moral development , 2000 .

[3]  C. Nelson,et al.  Recognition of facial expressions by seven-month-old infants. , 1979, Child development.

[4]  Cameron S. Carter,et al.  Do the Seconds Turn Into Hours? Relationships between Sustained Pupil Dilation in Response to Emotional Information and Self-Reported Rumination , 2003, Cognitive Therapy and Research.

[5]  K. Wermke,et al.  Developmental aspects of infant's cry melody and formants. , 2002, Medical engineering & physics.

[6]  Angela D. Friederici,et al.  The Developmental Origins of Voice Processing in the Human Brain , 2010, Neuron.

[7]  D. Hay,et al.  Responses of six-month-olds to the distress of their peers. , 1981, Child development.

[8]  Infants' responses to adult static facial expressions , 1995 .

[9]  J. Haviland,et al.  The Induced Affect Response: 10-Week-Old Infants' Responses to Three Emotion Expressions. , 1987 .

[10]  Raymond J. Dolan,et al.  Anterior cingulate activity during error and autonomic response , 2005, NeuroImage.

[11]  R M Burde,et al.  THE PUPIL , 1967, International ophthalmology clinics.

[12]  H. Fitzgerald Autonomic pupillary reflex activity during early infancy and its relation to social and nonsocial visual stimuli. , 1968, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[13]  J. Darby Speech evaluation in psychiatry , 1981 .

[14]  A. Walker-Andrews,et al.  Infants' discrimination of vocal expressions: Contributions of auditory and visual information , 1991 .

[15]  Megan R. Gunnar,et al.  The effects of maternal positive, neutral and negative affective communications on infant responses to new toys , 1987 .

[16]  Marina Davila Ross,et al.  Reconstructing the Evolution of Laughter in Great Apes and Humans , 2009, Current Biology.

[17]  M. Hoffman,et al.  Empathic distress in the newborn. , 1976 .

[18]  Edward B. Royzman,et al.  Negativity Bias, Negativity Dominance, and Contagion , 2001 .

[19]  P. Ludemann,et al.  Generalized discrimination of positive facial expression by seven- and ten-month-old infants. , 1991, Child development.

[20]  J. Beatty,et al.  The pupillary system. , 2000 .

[21]  Greg J Siegle,et al.  Pupillary reactivity to emotional information in child and adolescent depression: links to clinical and ecological measures. , 2007, The American journal of psychiatry.

[22]  T. Striano,et al.  Infants' electric brain responses to emotional prosody , 2005, Neuroreport.

[23]  J. Cappella The Faclal Feedback Hypothesis in Human Interaction , 1993 .

[24]  T. Field,et al.  Depressed mothers' newborns show less discrimination of other newborns' cry sounds. , 2007, Infant behavior & development.

[25]  Richard J Davidson,et al.  Empathy is associated with dynamic change in prefrontal brain electrical activity during positive emotion in children. , 2009, Child development.

[26]  P. Vuilleumier,et al.  How brains beware: neural mechanisms of emotional attention , 2005, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[27]  Gerard E. Bruder,et al.  Psychophysiology and Experimental Psychopathology. A tribute to Samuel Sutton. New York, New York, March 18, 1987. , 1992, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[28]  T. Striano,et al.  Developmental changes in infants’ processing of happy and angry facial expressions: A neurobehavioral study , 2007, Brain and Cognition.

[29]  Daniel Stahl,et al.  Contagious crying beyond the first days of life. , 2010, Infant behavior & development.

[30]  C. Bradshaw,et al.  Relationship of the 'fear-inhibited light reflex' to the level of state/trait anxiety in healthy subjects. , 2002, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[31]  M. Legerstee,et al.  Five- and eight-month-old infants recognize their faces and voices as familiar and social stimuli. , 1998, Child development.

[32]  Katherine D. Kinzler,et al.  The contribution of emotion and cognition to moral sensitivity: a neurodevelopmental study. , 2012, Cerebral cortex.

[33]  L. Camras,et al.  Emotional Facial Expressions in Infancy , 2010 .

[34]  Julia Irwin,et al.  Infant crying: Acoustics, perception and communication , 1995 .

[35]  N. Hadjikhani,et al.  Fear fosters flight: a mechanism for fear contagion when perceiving emotion expressed by a whole body. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[36]  Pascal Belin,et al.  Amygdala responses to nonlinguistic emotional vocalizations , 2007, NeuroImage.

[37]  K. Vohs,et al.  Case Western Reserve University , 1990 .

[38]  Lori Ann Vogt Empathy and Moral Development: Implications for caring and Justice. , 2003 .

[39]  D. L. Mumme,et al.  The infant as onlooker: learning from emotional reactions observed in a television scenario. , 2003, Child development.

[40]  Elisabeth Scheiner,et al.  Acoustic analyses of developmental changes and emotional expression in the preverbal vocalizations of infants. , 2002, Journal of voice : official journal of the Voice Foundation.

[41]  U. Hess,et al.  Facial mimicry and emotional contagion to dynamic emotional facial expressions and their influence on decoding accuracy. , 2001, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[42]  R. D. Clark,et al.  Distress crying in neonates: Species and peer specificity. , 1982 .

[43]  Marvin L. Simner,et al.  Newborn's Response to the Cry of Another Infant. , 1971 .

[44]  Hans-Georg Müller,et al.  Functional Data Analysis , 2016 .

[45]  E. Frommer Speech Evaluation in Psychiatry , 1982 .

[46]  H. Howland,et al.  Normal values and standard deviations for pupil diameter and interpupillary distance in subjects aged 1 month to 19 years , 2002, Ophthalmic & physiological optics : the journal of the British College of Ophthalmic Opticians.

[47]  D. L. Mumme,et al.  Infants' responses to facial and vocal emotional signals in a social referencing paradigm. , 1996, Child development.

[48]  Robert R. Provine,et al.  Laughter: A Stereotyped Human Vocalization , 2010 .

[49]  D. Altman,et al.  Calculating correlation coefficients with repeated observations: Part 2—correlation between subjects , 1995, BMJ.

[50]  G. Gredebäck,et al.  Infants’ understanding of everyday social interactions: A dual process account , 2010, Cognition.

[51]  C. Frith,et al.  The effects of sound on pupil size and the pupil light reflex , 1981 .

[52]  F. Simion,et al.  Can newborns discriminate between their own cry and the cry of another newborn infant? , 1999, Developmental psychology.

[53]  T. Striano,et al.  Individual Differences in Infants' Emotional Resonance to a Peer in Distress: Self-Other Awareness and Emotion Regulation , 2011 .

[54]  S. Steinhauer,et al.  The Pupillary Response in Cognitive Psychophysiology and Schizophrenia a , 1992, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[55]  Veikko Surakka,et al.  Pupil size variation as an indication of affective processing , 2003, Int. J. Hum. Comput. Stud..

[56]  Michael Lewis,et al.  Emotional Expressions of Young Infants and Children: A Practitioner's Primer , 2003 .

[57]  Lipps Theodor Das Wissen von fremden Ichen , 1907 .

[58]  A. Woodward,et al.  Not all emotions are created equal: the negativity bias in social-emotional development. , 2008, Psychological bulletin.

[59]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  The Ontogeny of Social Information Gathering , 1996 .

[60]  M. Bradley,et al.  The pupil as a measure of emotional arousal and autonomic activation. , 2008, Psychophysiology.

[61]  J. Decety Dissecting the Neural Mechanisms Mediating Empathy , 2011 .

[62]  C. Nelson The recognition of facial expressions in the first two years of life: mechanisms of development. , 1987, Child development.

[63]  C. Bradshaw,et al.  Sensitivity of the fear-inhibited light reflex to diazepam , 1998, Psychopharmacology.

[64]  D. Messinger,et al.  All smiles are positive, but some smiles are more positive than others. , 2001, Developmental psychology.

[65]  Susan S. Jones,et al.  The development of imitation in infancy , 2009, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[66]  P. Belin,et al.  Before Speech: Cerebral Voice Processing in Infants , 2010, Neuron.

[67]  Sylvain Sirois,et al.  Infant cognition: going full factorial with pupil dilation. , 2009, Developmental science.

[68]  Scott P. Johnson,et al.  Eye Tracking in Infancy Research , 2009, Developmental neuropsychology.

[69]  E. Hess,et al.  Pupil Size as Related to Interest Value of Visual Stimuli , 1960, Science.