Do emojis influence social interactions? Neural and behavioral responses to affective emojis in bargaining situations

被引:25
|
作者
Weiss, Martin [1 ]
Gutzeit, Julian [1 ]
Rodrigues, Johannes [1 ]
Mussel, Patrick [2 ]
Hewig, Johannes [1 ]
机构
[1] Julius Maximilians Univ Wurzburg, Differential Psychol Personal Psychol & Psychol D, Wurzburg, Germany
[2] Free Univ Berlin, Div Personal Psychol & Psychol Assessment, Berlin, Germany
关键词
decision making; emojis; facial expressions; social neuroscience; ultimatum game; FACIAL EXPRESSION; ULTIMATUM GAME; DECISION-MAKING; FRONTAL-CORTEX; BRAIN; FEEDBACK; COMPONENT; REWARD; POTENTIALS; NEGATIVITY;
D O I
10.1111/psyp.13321
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Emojis are nowadays a common substitute for real facial expressions to integrate emotions in social interaction. In certain contexts, emojis possibly could also transport information beyond emotions, reflecting interindividual differences or social aspects. In this study, we investigated the influence of emojis as socioemotional feedback stimuli on behavior and neural responses in a social decision game. We modified the Ultimatum Game by including emotional feedback provided by the proposer as response to the decision of the participant as receiver. Therefore, we generated identities that differed in their feedback behavior to identify differences in the processing of emotional feedback in a positive (acceptance) versus negative (rejection) frame. Regarding offer sizes, we replicated the valence effect of feedback-related negativity for small offer sizes evoking more negative brain potentials compared to larger ones. Further, we found an effect of affective emojis on distinct ERPs: A face-detecting neural component (N170) was examined to be a part of the processing of emojis, which resulted in significantly more negative amplitudes in response to a sad-looking emoji compared to smiling and neutral ones. Furthermore, P3 amplitudes indicate transmission effects from the feedback emoticons to the neural processing of different offer sizes. In contrast to previous findings, P3 responses of our subjects did not depend on the offer size, but rather by which kind of partner they were made. Since some evaluative processes did not reveal any effects, emojis seem to be less effective than real facial expressions, which convey more information that is socially meaningful.
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页数:14
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