Frontiers in Psychology,2021年
Paula J. Webster, Shuo Wang, Xin Li, Chuanbo Hu, Shan Jia
LicenseType:CC BY |
2 The Trade-Off Between Format Familiarity and Word-Segmentation Facilitation in Chinese Reading [期刊论文]
Frontiers in Psychology,2021年
Xin Li, Bingjie Zhao, Mingjing Chen, Yongsheng Wang, Xuejun Bai
LicenseType:CC BY |
Frontiers in Psychology,2021年
Xin Li, Bingjie Zhao, Mingjing Chen, Yongsheng Wang, Xuejun Bai
LicenseType:CC BY |
Frontiers in Psychology,2021年
Rubing Huang, Xin Li, Lei Xiao, Ming Zhou, Linghao Zhang, Xiang Chen
LicenseType:CC BY |
Frontiers in Psychology,2021年
Paula J. Webster, Shuo Wang, Xin Li
LicenseType:CC BY |
Different styles of social interaction are one of the core characteristics of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Social differences among individuals with ASD often include difficulty in discerning the emotions of neurotypical people based on their facial expressions. This review first covers the rich body of literature studying differences in facial emotion recognition (FER) in those with ASD, including behavioral studies and neurological findings. In particular, we highlight subtle emotion recognition and various factors related to inconsistent findings in behavioral studies of FER in ASD. Then, we discuss the dual problem of FER – namely facial emotion expression (FEE) or the production of facial expressions of emotion. Despite being less studied, social interaction involves both the ability to recognize emotions and to produce appropriate facial expressions. How others perceive facial expressions of emotion in those with ASD has remained an under-researched area. Finally, we propose a method for teaching FER [FER teaching hierarchy (FERTH)] based on recent research investigating FER in ASD, considering the use of posed vs. genuine emotions and static vs. dynamic stimuli. We also propose two possible teaching approaches: (1) a standard method of teaching progressively from simple drawings and cartoon characters to more complex audio-visual video clips of genuine human expressions of emotion with context clues or (2) teaching in a field of images that includes posed and genuine emotions to improve generalizability before progressing to more complex audio-visual stimuli. Lastly, we advocate for autism interventionists to use FER stimuli developed primarily for research purposes to facilitate the incorporation of well-controlled stimuli to teach FER and bridge the gap between intervention and research in this area.
Frontiers in Psychology,2021年
Li Sheng, Danyang Wang, Caila Walsh, Leah Heisler, Xin Li, Pumpki Lei Su
LicenseType:CC BY |
Usage-based accounts of language acquisition suggest that bilingual language proficiency is dynamic and susceptible to changes in language use. The COVID-19 pandemic led to unprecedented modifications in the language learning environment of developing bilinguals. Drawing on this unique opportunity, we analyzed existing data of two matched groups of Mandarin-English bilingual children (ages 4 to 8 years, n = 38), one tested before (pre-COVID group) and the other during (COVID group) the pandemic. The dataset comprises responses to a language environment questionnaire, and scores on a sentence comprehension task and a sentence recall task in the bilinguals’ two languages. Questionnaire data revealed a richer Mandarin language environment for children in the COVID group compared to peers in the pre-COVID group. On both comprehension and production tasks, the two groups performed comparably in English but the COVID group showed better performance in Mandarin than the pre-COVID group. Within the pre-COVID group, English was stronger than Mandarin in both comprehension and production. Within the COVID group, the two languages were balanced in comprehension and Mandarin was stronger than English in production. Moreover, language use variables were correlated with production performance in both languages. These patterns illustrate the intimate relationships between language use and bilingual language proficiency through the lens of COVID-19 induced language environment modification.