• Psychiatry research · Mar 2017

    Facial emotion recognition among typically developing young children: A psychometric validation of a subset of NimStim stimuli.

    • Lucy Barnard-Brak, Layla Abby, David M Richman, and Steven Chesnut.
    • Texas Tech University, United States. Electronic address: lucy.barnard-brak@ttu.edu.
    • Psychiatry Res. 2017 Mar 1; 249: 109-114.

    AbstractWe evaluated the psychometric properties of NimStim taking into account the effects of chronological age on the ability of typically developing young children (aged 2-6 years old) to recognize basic facial expressions (i.e., happy, sad, angry, and fearful). We also examined the psychometric sufficiency of NimStim under race-matched and -mismatched facial emotion stimuli. In the current study, race-matched stimuli referred to when children with African American backgrounds received African American faces to rate their emotions and vice versa for race-mismatched stimuli. Results of the current study represent the first psychometric analysis of reliability and validity for using NimStim pictures depicting happy, sad, angry, and fearful with typically developing children aged 2-6 years old as well as examining race-matched versus -mismatched stimuli. Analyses revealed the psychometric sufficiency of a subset of pictures depicting happy, sad, angry, and fearful from NimStim among young children across race matched and mismatched stimuli.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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