Cognitive Cues are More Compelling than Facial Cues in Determining Adults' Reactions towards Young Children

Previous research has demonstrated the significant influence that both children's facial features ( Lorenz, 1943 ) and children's cognitive expressions ( Bjorklund, Hernández Blasi, and Periss, 2010 ) have on adults' perception of young children. However, until now, these two types of...

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Main Authors: Carlos Hernández Blasi, David F. Bjorklund, Marcos Ruiz Soler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2015-04-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491501300212
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spelling doaj-65e538b840114404b7ce6ff2431290662020-11-25T04:10:41ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492015-04-011310.1177/14747049150130021210.1177_147470491501300212Cognitive Cues are More Compelling than Facial Cues in Determining Adults' Reactions towards Young ChildrenCarlos Hernández BlasiDavid F. BjorklundMarcos Ruiz SolerPrevious research has demonstrated the significant influence that both children's facial features ( Lorenz, 1943 ) and children's cognitive expressions ( Bjorklund, Hernández Blasi, and Periss, 2010 ) have on adults' perception of young children. However, until now, these two types of cues have been studied independently. The present study contrasted these two types of cues simultaneously in a group of college students. To this purpose, we designed five experimental conditions (Consistent, Inconsistent, Mature-Face, Immature-Face, and Faces-Only) in which we varied the presentation of a series of mature and immature vignettes (including two previously studied types of thinking: natural thinking and supernatural thinking) associated with a series of more mature and less mature children's faces. Performance in these conditions was contrasted with data from a Vignettes-Only condition taken from Bjorklund et al. (2010) . Results indicated that cognitive cues were more powerful than facial cues in determining adults' perceptions of young children. From an evolutionary developmental perspective, we suggest that facial cues are more relevant to adults during infancy than during the preschool period, when, with the development of spoken language, the verbalized expressions of children's thoughts become the principal cues influencing adults' perceptions, with facial cues playing a more secondary role.https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491501300212
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carlos Hernández Blasi
David F. Bjorklund
Marcos Ruiz Soler
spellingShingle Carlos Hernández Blasi
David F. Bjorklund
Marcos Ruiz Soler
Cognitive Cues are More Compelling than Facial Cues in Determining Adults' Reactions towards Young Children
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Carlos Hernández Blasi
David F. Bjorklund
Marcos Ruiz Soler
author_sort Carlos Hernández Blasi
title Cognitive Cues are More Compelling than Facial Cues in Determining Adults' Reactions towards Young Children
title_short Cognitive Cues are More Compelling than Facial Cues in Determining Adults' Reactions towards Young Children
title_full Cognitive Cues are More Compelling than Facial Cues in Determining Adults' Reactions towards Young Children
title_fullStr Cognitive Cues are More Compelling than Facial Cues in Determining Adults' Reactions towards Young Children
title_full_unstemmed Cognitive Cues are More Compelling than Facial Cues in Determining Adults' Reactions towards Young Children
title_sort cognitive cues are more compelling than facial cues in determining adults' reactions towards young children
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2015-04-01
description Previous research has demonstrated the significant influence that both children's facial features ( Lorenz, 1943 ) and children's cognitive expressions ( Bjorklund, Hernández Blasi, and Periss, 2010 ) have on adults' perception of young children. However, until now, these two types of cues have been studied independently. The present study contrasted these two types of cues simultaneously in a group of college students. To this purpose, we designed five experimental conditions (Consistent, Inconsistent, Mature-Face, Immature-Face, and Faces-Only) in which we varied the presentation of a series of mature and immature vignettes (including two previously studied types of thinking: natural thinking and supernatural thinking) associated with a series of more mature and less mature children's faces. Performance in these conditions was contrasted with data from a Vignettes-Only condition taken from Bjorklund et al. (2010) . Results indicated that cognitive cues were more powerful than facial cues in determining adults' perceptions of young children. From an evolutionary developmental perspective, we suggest that facial cues are more relevant to adults during infancy than during the preschool period, when, with the development of spoken language, the verbalized expressions of children's thoughts become the principal cues influencing adults' perceptions, with facial cues playing a more secondary role.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491501300212
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