[학위논문]마스크 착용 유무와 연령에 따른 유아의 얼굴표정 정서인식 차이에 관한 연구 A study on the differences in emotion recognition through facial expression of infants by mask wearing and age원문보기
The purpose of this study is to confirm the developmental tendency of emotion recognition in infancy by examining the difference in facial expression recognition accuracy and eye movements during the facial expression recognition process according to age and whether or not a mask is worn. For th...
The purpose of this study is to confirm the developmental tendency of emotion recognition in infancy by examining the difference in facial expression recognition accuracy and eye movements during the facial expression recognition process according to age and whether or not a mask is worn. For this purpose, this study was conducted on 37 children aged 3 and 46 children aged 5 in kindergartens and daycare centers located in Daegu city and date were colldected through questionnaires and eye-tracking. For data analysis, RM ANOVA was done using the amovi program, and heat-map analysis was done using the Tobii Pro Lab 1.171 program. The major results of this study were as follows; First, although there was no significant difference by age in accurately recognizing happy and fear expressions but it was found that 5-year-olds recognized sad and angry expressions more accurately than 3-year-olds. Second, there was no significant difference between wearing a mask in accurately recognizing sad, angry, and fear expressions, whereas in happy expressions, face without a mask was recognized more accurately than face with the mask on. Third, in the facial expression recognition process, both 3-year-olds and 5-year-olds took on different aspects depending on the emotional type, mask with or without mask, and AOI area. Specifically, 3-year-olds look at the eyes and mouth evenly when looking a happy expression, and stare at the eyes more than the mouth when looking a sad, angry, or fear expression. On the other hand, 5-year-olds stare at the mouth more than the eyes when looking a happy expression and stare at the eyes more than the mouth when looking a sad, angry, or fear expression. This study confirmed the developmental tendency of emotion recognition in infancy by examining the differences in facial expression recognition accuracy and eye movements in the facial expression recognition process according to age and whether or not masks were worn. Also, the findings of this study will contribute to providing basic data on facial expression recognition of young children.
The purpose of this study is to confirm the developmental tendency of emotion recognition in infancy by examining the difference in facial expression recognition accuracy and eye movements during the facial expression recognition process according to age and whether or not a mask is worn. For this purpose, this study was conducted on 37 children aged 3 and 46 children aged 5 in kindergartens and daycare centers located in Daegu city and date were colldected through questionnaires and eye-tracking. For data analysis, RM ANOVA was done using the amovi program, and heat-map analysis was done using the Tobii Pro Lab 1.171 program. The major results of this study were as follows; First, although there was no significant difference by age in accurately recognizing happy and fear expressions but it was found that 5-year-olds recognized sad and angry expressions more accurately than 3-year-olds. Second, there was no significant difference between wearing a mask in accurately recognizing sad, angry, and fear expressions, whereas in happy expressions, face without a mask was recognized more accurately than face with the mask on. Third, in the facial expression recognition process, both 3-year-olds and 5-year-olds took on different aspects depending on the emotional type, mask with or without mask, and AOI area. Specifically, 3-year-olds look at the eyes and mouth evenly when looking a happy expression, and stare at the eyes more than the mouth when looking a sad, angry, or fear expression. On the other hand, 5-year-olds stare at the mouth more than the eyes when looking a happy expression and stare at the eyes more than the mouth when looking a sad, angry, or fear expression. This study confirmed the developmental tendency of emotion recognition in infancy by examining the differences in facial expression recognition accuracy and eye movements in the facial expression recognition process according to age and whether or not masks were worn. Also, the findings of this study will contribute to providing basic data on facial expression recognition of young children.
※ AI-Helper는 부적절한 답변을 할 수 있습니다.