Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
Jealousy is a response to a situation in which a person feels a combination of different emotions, such as love, anger, sadness and fear when an affectionate interaction is happening between a loved one and someone else. This paper discusses the definition and onset of infant jealousy, the physiological basis of jealousy, whether maternal factors play a role, as well as studies on jealousy and EEG patterns. It has been argued that infants, as young as six-months-old display jealous-like behaviors. During jealousy evocation conditions, infants demonstrate negative emotions such as protesting or crying, diminished distancing, and heightened gaze toward their mother during maternal inattention. Approach/withdrawal behaviors and electroencephalography (EEG) activation were studied in the context of an infant jealousy paradigm. In this investigation, 45 mother-infants dyads were exposed to a social versus non-social condition during maternal inattention. During the social condition, infants demonstrated increased approach-style gaze and reach and negative affect. EEG was collected during all conditions on a subsample of 15 infants and in agreement with adult jealousy literature (Harmon-Jones, Peterson, & Harris, 2009), infants displayed left midfrontal EEG asymmetry, and displayed more approach motivations during the social doll condition indicative of jealousy approach motivations.
Extension
FAU
FAU
admin_unit="FAU01", ingest_id="ing8625", creator="creator:FAUDIG", creation_date="2011-02-03 15:24:30", modified_by="super:SPATEL", modification_date="2012-01-23 11:08:28"
Person Preferred Name
Blau, Alexis K.
Graduate College
Physical Description
electronic
viii, 43 p. : ill.
Use and Reproduction
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Other Title Info
The
development of jealousy