Unseen facial and bodily expressions trigger fast emotional reactions

The spontaneous tendency to synchronize our facial expressions with those of others is often termed emotional contagion. It is unclear, however, whether emotional contagion depends on visual awareness of the eliciting stimulus and which processes underlie the unfolding of expressive reactions in the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2009-10, Vol.106 (42), p.17661-17666
Hauptverfasser: Tamietto, Marco, Castelli, Lorys, Vighetti, Sergio, Perozzo, Paola, Geminiani, Giuliano, Weiskrantz, Lawrence, de Gelder, Beatrice
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container_issue 42
container_start_page 17661
container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
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creator Tamietto, Marco
Castelli, Lorys
Vighetti, Sergio
Perozzo, Paola
Geminiani, Giuliano
Weiskrantz, Lawrence
de Gelder, Beatrice
description The spontaneous tendency to synchronize our facial expressions with those of others is often termed emotional contagion. It is unclear, however, whether emotional contagion depends on visual awareness of the eliciting stimulus and which processes underlie the unfolding of expressive reactions in the observer. It has been suggested either that emotional contagion is driven by motor imitation (i.e., mimicry), or that it is one observable aspect of the emotional state arising when we see the corresponding emotion in others. Emotional contagion reactions to different classes of consciously seen and "unseen" stimuli were compared by presenting pictures of facial or bodily expressions either to the intact or blind visual field of two patients with unilateral destruction of the visual cortex and ensuing phenomenal blindness. Facial reactions were recorded using electromyography, and arousal responses were measured with pupil dilatation. Passive exposure to unseen expressions evoked faster facial reactions and higher arousal compared with seen stimuli, therefore indicating that emotional contagion occurs also when the triggering stimulus cannot be consciously perceived because of cortical blindness. Furthermore, stimuli that are very different in their visual characteristics, such as facial and bodily gestures, induced highly similar expressive responses. This shows that the patients did not simply imitate the motor pattern observed in the stimuli, but resonated to their affective meaning. Emotional contagion thus represents an instance of truly affective reactions that may be mediated by visual pathways of old evolutionary origin bypassing cortical vision while still providing a cornerstone for emotion communication and affect sharing.
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subjects Aged
Behavioral neuroscience
Biological Sciences
Blindness, Cortical - physiopathology
Blindness, Cortical - psychology
Cognition & reasoning
Dilatation
Electromyography
Emotional expression
Emotional states
Emotions
Emotions - physiology
Facial Expression
Facial expressions
Facial Muscles - physiopathology
Fear
Happiness
Humans
Information processing
Kinesics
Male
Mental stimulation
Middle Aged
Nonverbal communication
Nonverbal Communication - physiology
Nonverbal Communication - psychology
Photic Stimulation
Social Sciences
Visual cortex
Visual Cortex - injuries
Visual Cortex - physiopathology
Visual Fields
Visual Pathways - physiopathology
title Unseen facial and bodily expressions trigger fast emotional reactions
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