Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction: A New Approach to the Study of Emotional Development
- Part One Intrapersonal Processes
- 1 Self-Organization of Discrete Emotions, Emotion Patterns, and Emotion-Cognition Relations
- 2 Emotional Self-Organization at Three Time Scales
- 3 Emotions as Episodes of Subsystem Synchronization Driven by Nonlinear Appraisal Processes
- 4 Surprise! Facial Expressions Can be Coordinative Motor Structures
- 5 The Dynamic Construction of Emotion: Varieties in Anger
- Part Two Neurobiological Perspectives
- Part Three Interpersonal Processes
- Commentary: The Dynamics of Emotional Development: Models, Metaphors, and Methods
- Name Index
- Subject Index
4 - Surprise! Facial Expressions Can be Coordinative Motor Structures
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction: A New Approach to the Study of Emotional Development
- Part One Intrapersonal Processes
- 1 Self-Organization of Discrete Emotions, Emotion Patterns, and Emotion-Cognition Relations
- 2 Emotional Self-Organization at Three Time Scales
- 3 Emotions as Episodes of Subsystem Synchronization Driven by Nonlinear Appraisal Processes
- 4 Surprise! Facial Expressions Can be Coordinative Motor Structures
- 5 The Dynamic Construction of Emotion: Varieties in Anger
- Part Two Neurobiological Perspectives
- Part Three Interpersonal Processes
- Commentary: The Dynamics of Emotional Development: Models, Metaphors, and Methods
- Name Index
- Subject Index
Summary
This chapter presents a dynamical systems perspective on both facial expression specifically and emotion communication more generally. I have been developing this perspective in response to several interesting problems that have recently emerged in attempts to verify one currently popular theory of infant emotional expression. In this chapter, I will review these problems and discuss the limitations of extant theory. The dynamical systems view I will present is not a fully articulated alternative proposal. Instead, it is intended to represent a new direction for theoretical and empirical exploration in which solutions to the problems with the current theory may be found.
A Theory of Infant Emotional Expression
The currently popular view of infant emotional expression is most fully embodied in Izard's (1977, 1991) differential emotions theory. According to this theory, there is a species-specific set of human emotions that emerge during development according to a maturational timetable. In its original formulation (Izard, 1971; Izard and Malatesta, 1987; Izard et al., 1995), the theory proposes an innate concordance between infant emotions and a specified set of infant facial expressions (Izard, Dougherty, and Hembree, 1983). These expressions are direct readouts of their corresponding emotions, that is, they are automatically produced when the emotion is experienced and are not produced in other circumstances. Thus, facial expressions serve as veridical indices of infant affects and can be simply “read” by observers to determine the infant's emotional state.
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- Emotion, Development, and Self-OrganizationDynamic Systems Approaches to Emotional Development, pp. 100 - 124Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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