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Alexis Smith Flores, assistant professor of psychology at Lehigh University

Alexis Smith-Flores

Assistant Professor of Psychology

als625@lehigh.edu
Education:

PhD in Experimental Psychology, UC San Diego

MA in Experimental Psychology, UC San Diego

BA in Psychology, Boston University

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Additional Interests

  • Affective Cognition
  • Cognitive Development
  • Curiosity and Information-Seeking
  • Object Representation
  • Social Cognition

Research Statement

My research investigates how infants and young children understand emotions and use this understanding to learn about the physical and social world. Emotions provide powerful cues about people’s experiences, relationships, and intentions, and I study how children leverage these cues to guide their learning and social interactions. My work combines behavioral methods, cross-sectional and longitudinal designs, and open science practices.

To date, I have shown that even infants link emotional expressions—such as empathy and counter-empathy—with underlying social relationships, and that children use these links to evaluate others in morally sensitive ways. I have also demonstrated that children apply emotion understanding to object reasoning, using emotional cues to infer preferences and reason about others’ beliefs. More recently, I have begun examining how individual differences and early experiences shape children’s emotion reasoning, and how detecting errors in their environment influence their curiosity, information-seeking, and exploration.

Looking ahead, I aim to expand this research by (1) characterizing variability in early emotion reasoning and its relationship to later social outcomes; (2) examining how cognitive mechanisms underlying emotion processing interact with learning processes; and (3) exploring how children use emotion and social information to guide decisions about social partners. 

Biography

Alexis Smith-Flores is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology. She joined the Lehigh faculty in 2025 after receiving her Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from the University of California, San Diego. Dr. Smith-Flores’s research examines how infants and young children understand and reason about emotions—how they interpret emotional cues, use emotions to make inferences about others’ relationships and intentions, and apply emotion understanding to guide learning and social evaluation. Her work also investigates how individual differences and early experiences shape emotion reasoning and how sensitivity to errors in their environment influence children’s curiosity, exploration, and decision-making.

Smith-Flores, A.S., Bonamy, G.J.*, & Powell, L.J. (2025). Children’s evaluations of empathizers. Child Development. 10.1111/cdev.14242

Smith-Flores, A.S., Herrera-Guevara, I.A.*, & Powell, L.J. (2024). Infants expect friends, but not rivals, to be happy for each other when they succeed. Developmental Science10.1111/desc.13423

Smith-Flores, A.S., Bonamy, G.J.*, & Powell, L.J. (2023). Children’s reasoning about empathy and social relationships. Open Mind: Discoveries in Cognitive Science, 7, 837-854. 10.1162/opmi_a_00109

Smith-Flores, A.S., & Powell, L.J. (2023). Joint reasoning about social affiliation and emotion. Nature Reviews Psychology. 2(4). 10.1038/s44159-023-00181-0

Smith-Flores, A.S. & Feigenson, L. (2022). “Yay! Yuck!” Toddlers use incongruent emotions to reason about hidden objects. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 221, 105464. 10.1016/j.jecp.2022.105464

Smith-Flores, A.S., Perez, J., Zhang., M.H.*, & Feigenson, L. (2021). Online measures of looking and learning in infancy. Infancy, 27(1), 4-24. 10.1111/infa.12435 

Smith-Flores, A.S. & Feigenson, L. (2021). Preschoolers represent others’ false beliefs about emotions. Cognitive Development, 59, 101081. 10.1016/j.cogdev.2021.101081  

Smith-Flores, A.S., Applin, J.B., Blake, P.R., & Kibbe, M.M. (2021). Children’s understanding of economic demand: A dissociation between inference and choice. Cognition, 21410.1016/j.cognition.2021.104747

Silver, A.M., Stahl, A.E., Loiotile, R., Smith-Flores, A.S., & Feigenson, L. (2020). Not Choosing Leads to Not Liking: Choice-Induced Preference in Infancy. Psychological Science, 31(11), 1422-1429. 

Teaching

PSYC 397 Infant Cognition