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Touchscreen generation no less in reading facial cues: Study

By ANI | Published: May 09, 2020 4:25 PM

The growing use of mobile technologies among kids, have created speculations about the children getting worse at reading emotions and picking up cues from people's faces. However, a recent study suggests that today's kids are comparatively no different from the children who did not grow up with tablets and smartphones.

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The growing use of mobile technologies among kids, have created speculations about the children getting worse at reading emotions and picking up cues from people's faces. However, a recent study suggests that today's kids are comparatively no different from the children who did not grow up with tablets and smartphones.

Infancy and early childhood are critical developmental phases during which children learn to interpret important non-verbal cues such as facial expressions, tone of voice, and gestures.

Traditionally, this happens through direct face-to-face communication. But with the ubiquitous use of tablets and other devices today -- among toddlers, as well as their caregivers -- the psychologists wanted to know: Have younger children missed the opportunity to understand these cues?

The study tested the ability of more than 50 sixth graders in 2017, and more than 50 sixth graders in 2012 -- both male and female, from the same Southern California public school -- to correctly identify emotions in photographs and videos.

Most children from the sixth-grade class of 2012 were born in 2001, while the first iPhone came out in 2007, for example, and the first iPad in 2010 -- a time when the sixth graders from the 2017 class were infants and toddlers.

The psychologists found that the 2017 sixth-graders scored 40 per cent higher than the 2012 class at correctly identifying emotions in photographs and made significantly fewer errors than the 2012 students.

In addition, the 2017 students were better at identifying the emotions in a series of videos, but only slightly better, a difference the researchers said is not statistically significant. The psychologists did not look at face-to-face communication.

The study has been published in the journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking.

"At a time when so many people are communicating through screens, I hope our findings give parents some peace of mind that kids seem to be able to learn to read social cues in photos," said lead author Yalda T. Uhls, a UCLA adjunct assistant professor of psychology and founder and executive director of the UCLA-based Center for Scholars and Storytellers.

In today's world, young people use photos and, increasingly, video to communicate. In 2018, for instance, 69 per cent of teens reported they used Snapchat and 72 per cent used Instagram, both of which incorporate pictures and text messages, Uhls said.

A 2017 study with 500 participants found that nearly half of children between the ages of 6 and 12 regularly used a social media app or website, with 29 per cent of those aged 6 to 8 reporting they used Snapchat. Another study, from 2016, found that 50 per cent of children had a social media account before age 12, with 11 per cent getting their account before age 10.

Uhls noted that even text-based communication can convey emotion through capitalisation, emoticons, and repetition.

"Perhaps our 2017 participants had more opportunities to see, communicate and learn nonverbal emotion expressed in photographs of faces than those from 2012 because of the time spent taking and reviewing photos of themselves and others," she said.

Uhls strongly recommends that families have face-to-face conversations around the dinner table and at other times of the day. She also encourages parents to put their devices away when talking with other people, especially their children.

She noted that while the 2017 participants improved in their ability to read emotional cues in photos, she is not we certain whether this ability transfers to their ability to assess emotions in person; she thinks it may.

"With so many of our kids on screens so frequently, it is important to know those good things can come from their interactions with photos," Uhls said. "I would expect with the recent increase in video communication, they may be now learning these cues from video chat too."

She said that by evaluating the nuances of screen time, researchers can learn which practices have educational value and which do not.

"Technology is always evolving, and I expect that researchers will seek to understand how increased exposure to pictures, videos, live chats, games, virtual reality and other emerging platforms for communication impact our youth," Uhls said.

( With inputs from ANI )

Tags: Ucla-based center for scholarsUcla
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