A comparative study of the attentional blink of facial expression in deaf and hearing children

The rapid serial visual presentation paradigm was used to investigate differences in the attentional blink between deaf children and hearing children in response to facial expressions of fear and disgust. The results showed that: (1) deaf and hearing children had a higher accuracy rate for T1 with d...

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Main Authors: Yu Zhan Yu, Xing Jin, Linxiang Jia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2023-05-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695231182294
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author Yu Zhan Yu
Xing Jin
Linxiang Jia
author_facet Yu Zhan Yu
Xing Jin
Linxiang Jia
author_sort Yu Zhan Yu
collection DOAJ
description The rapid serial visual presentation paradigm was used to investigate differences in the attentional blink between deaf children and hearing children in response to facial expressions of fear and disgust. The results showed that: (1) deaf and hearing children had a higher accuracy rate for T1 with disgustful facial expression than T1 with fear facial expression, (2) There was no significant difference in attentional blink between deaf and hearing children, (3) When T2 appeared at Lag6, the response accuracy of T2 in the disgust T1 condition was lower than that in fear T1 condition. However, no significant difference in T2 at Lag2 was found between the two conditions. The results showed that deaf children and those with hearing were more sensitive to facial expressions of disgust, which captured more attentional resources, and the ability of visual attention of deaf children was not weaker than hearing children.
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spelling doaj.art-c0c3c06a182f48fb8b5963151f7182b92023-07-04T19:03:59ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952023-05-011410.1177/20416695231182294A comparative study of the attentional blink of facial expression in deaf and hearing childrenYu Zhan YuXing JinLinxiang JiaThe rapid serial visual presentation paradigm was used to investigate differences in the attentional blink between deaf children and hearing children in response to facial expressions of fear and disgust. The results showed that: (1) deaf and hearing children had a higher accuracy rate for T1 with disgustful facial expression than T1 with fear facial expression, (2) There was no significant difference in attentional blink between deaf and hearing children, (3) When T2 appeared at Lag6, the response accuracy of T2 in the disgust T1 condition was lower than that in fear T1 condition. However, no significant difference in T2 at Lag2 was found between the two conditions. The results showed that deaf children and those with hearing were more sensitive to facial expressions of disgust, which captured more attentional resources, and the ability of visual attention of deaf children was not weaker than hearing children.https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695231182294
spellingShingle Yu Zhan Yu
Xing Jin
Linxiang Jia
A comparative study of the attentional blink of facial expression in deaf and hearing children
i-Perception
title A comparative study of the attentional blink of facial expression in deaf and hearing children
title_full A comparative study of the attentional blink of facial expression in deaf and hearing children
title_fullStr A comparative study of the attentional blink of facial expression in deaf and hearing children
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of the attentional blink of facial expression in deaf and hearing children
title_short A comparative study of the attentional blink of facial expression in deaf and hearing children
title_sort comparative study of the attentional blink of facial expression in deaf and hearing children
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695231182294
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