Autor: |
Chinn LK; Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA., Ovchinnikova I; Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA., Sukmanova AA; Laboratory of Translational Sciences of Human Development, St Petersburg State University, St Petersburg, Russia., Davydova AO; Laboratory of Translational Sciences of Human Development, St Petersburg State University, St Petersburg, Russia., Grigorenko EL; Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA.; Laboratory of Translational Sciences of Human Development, St Petersburg State University, St Petersburg, Russia.; Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.; Child Study Center and Haskins Laboratories, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA. |
Abstrakt: |
Millions of children worldwide are raised in institutionalized settings. Unfortunately, institutionalized rearing is often characterized by psychosocial deprivation, leading to difficulties in numerous social, emotional, physical, and cognitive skills. One such skill is the ability to recognize emotional facial expressions. Children with a history of institutional rearing tend to be worse at recognizing emotions in facial expressions than their peers, and this deficit likely affects social interactions. However, emotional information is also conveyed vocally, and neither prosodic information processing nor the cross-modal integration of facial and prosodic emotional expressions have been investigated in these children to date. We recorded electroencephalograms (EEG) while 47 children under institutionalized care (IC) (n = 24) or biological family care (BFC) (n = 23) viewed angry, happy, or neutral facial expressions while listening to pseudowords with angry, happy, or neutral prosody. The results indicate that 20- to 40-month-olds living in IC have event-related potentials (ERPs) over midfrontal brain regions that are less sensitive to incongruent facial and prosodic emotions relative to children under BFC, and that their brain responses to prosody are less lateralized. Children under IC also showed midfrontal ERP differences in processing of angry prosody, indicating that institutionalized rearing may specifically affect the processing of anger. |