Louis A. Schmidt’s research while affiliated with McMaster University and other places

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Publications (401)


Means and standard deviations and between-group differences on the five expressions of children's shyness-related behaviors by country.
Correlations among the five expressions of children's shyness-related behaviors by country.
Results of repeated measures ANCOVA for the effects of country, gender, and age on shyness-related behaviors.
Observed Shyness-Related Behavioral Responses to a Self-Presentation Speech Task: A Study Comparing Chinese and Canadian Children
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  • Full-text available

November 2024

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21 Reads

Behavioral Sciences

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Shumin Wang

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Louis A. Schmidt

Past research suggests that expressions of shyness are associated with several distinct behaviors that may differ between Eastern and Western cultures. However, this evidence has largely been derived from subjective ratings, such self-, teacher-, and parent-report measures. In this study, we examined between-country differences on measures of directly observed shyness-related behaviors during a speech task in children. Participants were 74 Chinese (Mage = 4.76 years old, SDage = 0.62 years old; 77.0% male) and 189 Canadian (Mage = 4.80 years old, SDage = 0.82 years old; 48.1% male) children aged 4–6 years. As predicted, the results reveal that Chinese children exhibit a higher frequency of gaze aversion and lower total time speaking compared to Canadian children. Additionally, significant interactions between country and gender were found for fidgeting and smiling behaviors, indicating that cultural expectations and norms influence how boys and girls express some shyness-related behaviors in social situations. These preliminary findings extend prior cross-cultural research on shyness-related behaviors indexed using subjective report measures to directly observed measures, highlighting the importance of cultural context in shaping children’s responses to social evaluation.

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A dyadic investigation of shy children's behavioral and affective responses to delivering a speech

August 2024

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19 Reads

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1 Citation

Developmental Science

Shyness is typically associated with avoidant social behavior and restricted affect in new social situations. However, we know considerably less about how one child's shyness influences another child's behavior and affect in new social situations. Children's shyness was parent‐reported when children were age 3 ( N = 105, 52 girls, M age = 3.50 years), and children were tested approximately 1 year later ( M age = 4.76 years) in same‐gender dyads where they were asked to give an impromptu speech about their most recent birthday in front of an experimenter and the other member of the dyad. We examined whether children's shyness and speech order influenced their own and their social partner's observed behavior and affect during the speech. Regardless of speech order, children's own shyness was positively associated with their own avoidant social behavior and gaze aversion. Regardless of shyness, children who gave their speech second averted their gaze more than children who gave their speech first. We also found that children who gave their speech second displayed less positive affect if their social partner who they watched give the speech first was shyer. We speculate that some 4‐year‐old children may be sensitive to the avoidant behaviors of their shy peers and, in turn, respond with less animation when it is their turn to participate in the same activity. Research Highlights We examined whether preschool children's shyness and speech order influenced their own and their social partner's observed behavior and affect during a dyadic speech task Children's own shyness was positively associated with their own avoidant social behavior and gaze aversion Children who gave their speech second averted their gaze more than children who gave their speech first. Children who gave their speech second displayed less positive affect if their social partner who they watched give a speech first was shyer These findings suggest that preschool‐aged children are sensitive to learning about their environment indirectly through social observation


Sociability across Eastern-Western cultures: Is it the same underlying construct?

July 2024

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18 Reads

Scandinavian Journal of Psychology

In this study, we examined cross‐cultural differences in sociability, a core personality facet of the higher order extraversion trait, which has been reported at lower levels in Eastern versus Western cultures several decades ago. Up until now, however, East–West cultural comparisons on the Western‐defined construct of sociability have been limited, despite the extensive research published on extraversion indicating that this personality dimension is globally relevant across cultures. Following current practices, we first assessed for measurement invariance (MI) on the Cheek and Buss sociability scale between Chinese ( n = 816, 47.2% male, M = 18.51 years, SD = 1.26 years) and Canadian ( n = 995, 30.8% male, M = 19.62 years, SD = 1.25 years) young adult samples to ensure any comparisons would be valid and meaningful. Results from a multigroup confirmatory factor analysis (exact invariance) showed that there was measurement non‐invariance at the scalar level in the sociability construct across country and country by sex, and the newer alignment method (approximate invariance) confirmed these results, suggesting that mean level comparisons of sociability were biased and noninformative. Our findings indicated that although a few of the higher‐level personality dimensions such as extraversion are considered universal, the facets underlying their meaning, like sociability, are not as clearly delineated between cultures. Alongside the present‐day pursuit of understanding personality across cultures through an indigenous measurement lens in tandem with the notion of universality, researchers should also consider narrowing their focus onto lower‐level facets, each of which is likely to be uniquely embedded into a cultural context.


Landing page of potential opponents by condition. Note: Photographs of average and unattractive opponents are blurred due to the sensitive nature of the attractiveness ratings. Permission to use images was granted by the Chicago Face Database (CFD). CFD models provided written consent for their images to be used in publications. Procedures: Step 1: Participants in each condition are shown five possible opponents manipulated based on friendliness (a, b, c, or d depending on condition). Step 2: Participants selected two opponents to play against (a, b, c, or d depending on condition). Step 3: Cyberball game ostensibly “crashes” (blank screen presented). Step 4: New screen is populated with pictures of two opponents based on condition randomly assigned to (a, b, c, or d depending on condition; ✔ opponents played against), plus participant’s own picture (Fig. 2 for example of the Attractive Friendly Condition).
Attractive friendly condition. Note. Screenshot of Cyberball game with participant’s identity concealed. Yellow around glove indicates location of ball. Permission to use images was granted by the Chicago Face Database (CFD). CFD models provided written consent for their images to be used in publications.
P3 Amplitude. (A) Group and grand average waveforms from central-posterior midline channel cluster (indicated by white dots on grand average map) and topographical maps. (B) Individual peak and group average peak P3 amplitudes. Error bars are ± 1 SD. Panel (C) Distribution plots of group bootstrapped trimmed means and paired comparison differences. *p < 0.05.
Residual P3 Amplitude. (A) Group average peak P3 residual amplitudes. (B) Distribution plots of group bootstrapped difference of paired comparisons. *p < 0.05.
Ratings of attractiveness by photo. *opponent; U1= unattractive opponent 1; N= neutral non-opponent; A1= attractive opponent 1; U2= unattractive opponent 2; A2= attractive opponent 2.
Behavioral and neural responses to social exclusion in women: the role of facial attractiveness and friendliness

July 2024

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91 Reads

The behavioral and neural responses to social exclusion were examined in women randomized to four conditions, varying in levels of attractiveness and friendliness. Informed by evolutionary theory, we predicted that being socially excluded by attractive unfriendly women would be more distressing than being excluded by unattractive women, irrespective of their friendliness level. Our results contradicted most of our predictions but provide important insights into women’s responses to interpersonal conflict. Accounting for rejection sensitivity, P300 event-related potential amplitudes were largest when women were excluded by unattractive unfriendly women. This may be due to an expectancy violation or an annoyance with being excluded by women low on social desirability. An examination of anger rumination rates by condition suggests the latter. Only attractive women’s attractiveness ratings were lowered in the unfriendly condition, indicating they were specifically punished for their exclusionary behavior. Women were more likely to select attractive women to compete against with one exception—they selected the Black attractive opponent less often than the White attractive opponent when presented as unfriendly. Finally, consistent with studies on retaliation in relation to social exclusion, women tended to rate competitors who rejected them as being more rude, more competitive, less attractive, less nice, and less happy than non-competitors. The ubiquity of social exclusion and its pointed emotional and physiological impact on women demands more research on this topic.



Public health nurse-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy for postpartum depression: Assessing the effects of maternal treatment on infant emotion regulation

January 2024

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55 Reads

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1 Citation

Development and Psychopathology

The effects of maternal postpartum depression (PPD) on offspring emotion regulation (ER) are particularly deleterious as difficulties with ER predict an increased risk of psychopathology. This study examined the impact of maternal participation in a public health nurse (PHN)-delivered group cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) intervention on infant ER. Mothers/birthing parents were ≥ 18 years old with an Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) score ≥ 10, and infants were < 12 months. Between 2017 and 2020, 141 mother–infant dyads were randomized to experimental or control groups. Infant ER was measured at baseline (T1) and nine weeks later (T2) using two neurophysiological measures (frontal alpha asymmetry (FAA) and high-frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV)), and informant-report of infant temperament. Mothers were a mean of 30.8 years old (SD = 4.7), 92.3% were married/ common-law, and infants were a mean of 5.4 months old (SD = 2.9) and 52.1% were male. A statistically significant group-by-time interaction was found to predict change in HF-HRV between T1 and T2 (F(1,68.3) = 4.04, p = .04), but no significant interaction predicted change in FAA or temperament. Results suggest that PHN-delivered group CBT for PPD may lead to adaptive changes in a neurophysiological marker of infant ER, highlighting the importance of early maternal intervention.



Citations (76)


... On the other hand, negative shyness was more closely associated with social withdrawal and anxiety. In a more recent study addressing children's gaze and expressions of positive and negative affect, Hassan and Schmidt [58] examined how dyads of preschoolers responded to the task of giving an impromptu speech about their most recent birthday in front of an experimenter. After one child in the dyad delivered their speech, the other child took their turn. ...

Reference:

Multimodal Communicative Behaviours in Shy Children in Assessment Situations and Social Evaluative Contexts
A dyadic investigation of shy children's behavioral and affective responses to delivering a speech
  • Citing Article
  • August 2024

Developmental Science

... Depresja u matki może także przyczynić się do zaburzenia relacji pomiędzy rodzicami oraz do zaburzeń psychicznych u ojca dziecka. Udowodniono także, że kobiety z zaburzeniami depresyjnymi rzadziej stawiają się na kontrole ginekologiczne po porodzie, na wizyty pediatryczne oraz szczepienia, co ma wiele konsekwencji zdrowotnych dla matki i dla dziecka [3][4][5]7]. ...

Public health nurse-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy for postpartum depression: Assessing the effects of maternal treatment on infant emotion regulation
  • Citing Article
  • January 2024

Development and Psychopathology

... In this the context, biologically based measures may provide a relatively higher level of measurement stability, acting as an anchor to better understand change over time in questionnaires and behavioral tasks. The literature in general, and articles in this issue, illustrate the variability in this approach, including measures of electroencephalogram (EEG; Frenkel et al., 2024), magnetic resonance imaging (Schwarzlose et al., 2024), respiratory sinus arrythmia (RSA; Hassan & Schmidt, 2024;Wood et al., 2024;Yavuz et al., 2024), stress hormones (Wood et al., 2024), immune function (Serrano et al., 2024), and telomere length (Bosquet Enlow et al., 2024). ...

How Biology Shapes the Development of Shyness Within Specific Contexts: A Longitudinal, Cross-Lagged Investigation

Developmental Psychology

... Further, several groups have proposed diverse evolutionary timelines and functions of various shyness subtypes (Hassan, MacGowan, Poole, & Schmidt, 2021;Schmidt & Poole, 2019) and shy expressions (Colonnesi, Nikolić, & Bögels, 2020). For example, Schmidt and Poole (2019) draw from Buss's (1986) argument that some shy individuals predominantly experience fear in novel social situations. ...

Evolutionary and Neuroscientific Perspectives on Adaptive Shyness
  • Citing Chapter
  • April 2021

... En esa línea, Jung et al. (2023) Se descubrió que la IE protege a algunos niños tímidos con problemas de aprendizaje de los problemas de internalización. Según la investigación, esta inteligencia es una habilidad socio cognitiva que ayuda a los niños a comprender y emplear sus emociones y las de los demás para lograr sus objetivos. ...

Children's shyness, emotional intelligence, and internalizing behaviors
  • Citing Article
  • September 2023

Personality and Individual Differences

... Environmental factors are associated with NDDs; among those are well-studied factors related to pregnancy and birth, such as prematurity, low birthweight, maternal obesity, and smoking during pregnancy [2,4,5]. Furthermore, although less studied, exercise during pregnancy may favor neurodevelopment in the offspring [6]. However, causal relationships are more difficult to establish, for instance, smoking during pregnancy is associated with increased risk of ADHD and ASD in the offspring, but this relationship may be due genetic factors related to both ADHD/ASD in offspring and maternal smoking behavior, and not the effect by smoking per se [3,7]. ...

Early neurodevelopment in the offspring of women enrolled in a randomized controlled trial assessing the effectiveness of a nutrition + exercise intervention on the cognitive development of 12-month-olds
  • Citing Article
  • July 2023

Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease

... So far, most studies have focused on early to middle or late childhood, and middle childhood to preadolescence. Of the 13 studies in which AS trajectories are reported, two followed samples during infancy or early childhood (Degnan et al., 2014;Hassan et al., 2023), five tracked samples from early to middle or late childhood (Booth-Laforce & Oxford, 2008;Eggum et al., 2009;Gazelle & Ladd, 2003;Morneau-Vaillancourt et al., 2021;Poole et al., 2020), and four followed This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. ...

Developmental patterns of children's shyness: Relations with physiological, emotional, and regulatory responses to being treated unfairly
  • Citing Article
  • July 2023

Child Development

... This study largely focused on Caucasian women who had advanced levels of education and belonged to a higher socioeconomic status (SES). As anticipated, a notable fraction of the studies displayed constraints such as limited sample sizes, imbalanced comparison group sizes, and the inclusion of only pregnancies with little risk [37,72,73]. Further investigation should assess the occurrence of negative outcomes for both mothers and newborns, such as adverse events and maternal deaths, in a more diverse population that encompasses different nationalities and socioeconomic backgrounds, as opposed to the standard care group. ...

The impact of peer-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy for postpartum depression on infant emotion regulation
  • Citing Article
  • June 2023

Journal of Affective Disorders

... Pregnancy marks a significant transition to motherhood, characterized by considerable physical and psychological changes [1,2]. This period is particularly susceptible to the development of mental disorders [3]. ...

Do Psychological and Behavioural Factors Change Over Pregnancy?
  • Citing Article
  • June 2023

Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Canada