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      Hearing Status Affects Children’s Emotion Understanding in Dynamic Social Situations: An Eye-Tracking Study

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          Abstract

          Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text.

          Objectives:

          For children to understand the emotional behavior of others, the first two steps involve emotion encoding and emotion interpreting, according to the Social Information Processing model. Access to daily social interactions is prerequisite to a child acquiring these skills, and barriers to communication such as hearing loss impede this access. Therefore, it could be challenging for children with hearing loss to develop these two skills. The present study aimed to understand the effect of prelingual hearing loss on children’s emotion understanding, by examining how they encode and interpret nonverbal emotional cues in dynamic social situations.

          Design:

          Sixty deaf or hard-of-hearing (DHH) children and 71 typically hearing (TH) children (3–10 years old, mean age 6.2 years, 54% girls) watched videos of prototypical social interactions between a target person and an interaction partner. At the end of each video, the target person did not face the camera, rendering their facial expressions out of view to participants. Afterward, participants were asked to interpret the emotion they thought the target person felt at the end of the video. As participants watched the videos, their encoding patterns were examined by an eye tracker, which measured the amount of time participants spent looking at the target person’s head and body and at the interaction partner’s head and body. These regions were preselected for analyses because they had been found to provide cues for interpreting people’s emotions and intentions.

          Results:

          When encoding emotional cues, both the DHH and TH children spent more time looking at the head of the target person and at the head of the interaction partner than they spent looking at the body or actions of either person. Yet, compared with the TH children, the DHH children looked at the target person’s head for a shorter time (b = −0.03, p = 0.030), and at the target person’s body (b = 0.04, p = 0.006) and at the interaction partner’s head (b = 0.03, p = 0.048) for a longer time. The DHH children were also less accurate when interpreting emotions than their TH peers (b = −0.13, p = 0.005), and their lower scores were associated with their distinctive encoding pattern.

          Conclusions:

          The findings suggest that children with limited auditory access to the social environment tend to collect visually observable information to compensate for ambiguous emotional cues in social situations. These children may have developed this strategy to support their daily communication. Yet, to fully benefit from such a strategy, these children may need extra support for gaining better social-emotional knowledge.

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          Most cited references53

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          A review and reformulation of social information-processing mechanisms in children's social adjustment.

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            A Test of Missing Completely at Random for Multivariate Data with Missing Values

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              • Article: not found

              Newborns' preference for face-relevant stimuli: effects of contrast polarity.

              There is currently no agreement as to how specific or general are the mechanisms underlying newborns' face preferences. We address this issue by manipulating the contrast polarity of schematic and naturalistic face-related images and assessing the preferences of newborns. We find that for both schematic and naturalistic face images, the contrast polarity is important. Newborns did not show a preference for an upright face-related image unless it was composed of darker areas around the eyes and mouth. This result is consistent with either sensitivity to the shadowed areas of a face with overhead (natural) illumination and/or to the detection of eye contact.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ear Hear
                Ear Hear
                AUD
                Ear and Hearing
                Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (Hagerstown, MD )
                0196-0202
                1538-4667
                22 December 2020
                Jul-Aug 2021
                : 42
                : 4
                : 1024-1033
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Unit of Developmental and Educational Psychology, Institute of Psychology, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands
                [2 ]Cognitive Psychology Unit, Institute of Psychology, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands
                [3 ]Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands
                [4 ]Department of Otorhinolaryngology and Head & Neck Surgery, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands
                [5 ]Department of Psychology and Human Development, Institute of Education, University College London, London, UK.
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Yung-Ting Tsou, Unit of Developmental and Educational Psychology, Institute of Psychology, Leiden University, Pieter de la Court Building, Wassenaarseweg 52, 2333 AK, Leiden, The Netherlands. E-mail: y.tsou@ 123456fsw.leidenuniv.nl .
                Article
                00024
                10.1097/AUD.0000000000000994
                8221710
                33369943
                df1228a5-49e6-435d-906a-aa67d43dadf5
                Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Ear & Hearing is published on behalf of the American Auditory Society, by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License 4.0 (CCBY-NC-ND), where it is permissible to download and share the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal.

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                child development,deaf and hard of hearing,dynamic social scenes,emotion understanding,eye tracking,hearing loss,sensorineural,social information processing

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