Angry, Disgusted, or Afraid? Studies on the Malleability of Emotion Perception

Current theories of emotion perception posit that basic facial expressions signal categorically discrete emotions or affective dimensions of valence and arousal. In both cases, the information is thought to be directly "read out" from the face in a way that is largely immune to context. In...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological science 2008-07, Vol.19 (7), p.724-732
Hauptverfasser: Aviezer, Hillel, Hassin, Ran R., Ryan, Jennifer, Grady, Cheryl, Susskind, Josh, Anderson, Adam, Moscovitch, Morris, Bentin, Shlomo
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container_end_page 732
container_issue 7
container_start_page 724
container_title Psychological science
container_volume 19
creator Aviezer, Hillel
Hassin, Ran R.
Ryan, Jennifer
Grady, Cheryl
Susskind, Josh
Anderson, Adam
Moscovitch, Morris
Bentin, Shlomo
description Current theories of emotion perception posit that basic facial expressions signal categorically discrete emotions or affective dimensions of valence and arousal. In both cases, the information is thought to be directly "read out" from the face in a way that is largely immune to context. In contrast, the three studies reported here demonstrated that identical facial configurations convey strikingly different emotions and dimensional values depending on the affective context in which they are embedded. This effect is modulated by the similarity between the target facial expression and the facial expression typically associated with the context. Moreover, by monitoring eye movements, we demonstrated that characteristic fixation patterns previously thought to be determined solely by the facial expression are systematically modulated by emotional context already at very early stages of visual processing, even by the first time the face is fixated. Our results indicate that the perception of basic facial expressions is not context invariant and can be categorically altered by context at early perceptual levels.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02148.x
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subjects Adolescent
Affect
Anger
Arousal
Cognitive psychology
Disgust
Emotion
Emotional expression
Emotions
Experimental psychology
Eye movements
Face
Facial Expression
Facial expressions
Fear
Female
Fixation
Humans
Male
Nonverbal communication
Perceptions
Perceptual similarity
Psychology
Sadness
Signalling
Social Perception
Social psychology
Visual Perception
Visual processing
Young Adult
title Angry, Disgusted, or Afraid? Studies on the Malleability of Emotion Perception
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