The shared signal hypothesis: Facial and bodily expressions of emotion mutually inform one another

被引:0
作者
Daniel N. Albohn
Joseph C. Brandenburg
Kestutis Kveraga
Reginald B. Adams
机构
[1] The University of Chicago,Booth School of Business
[2] The Pennsylvania State University,Department of School Psychology
[3] Massachusetts General Hospital,Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging
[4] Harvard Medical School,Department of Radiology
[5] The Pennsylvania State University,Department of Psychology
来源
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics | 2022年 / 84卷
关键词
Bodies; Faces; Emotion expressions; Emotion recognition;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Decades of research show that contextual information from the body, visual scene, and voices can facilitate judgments of facial expressions of emotion. To date, most research suggests that bodily expressions of emotion offer context for interpreting facial expressions, but not vice versa. The present research aimed to investigate the conditions under which mutual processing of facial and bodily displays of emotion facilitate and/or interfere with emotion recognition. In the current two studies, we examined whether body and face emotion recognition are enhanced through integration of shared emotion cues, and/or hindered through mixed signals (i.e., interference). We tested whether faces and bodies facilitate or interfere with emotion processing by pairing briefly presented (33 ms), backward-masked presentations of faces with supraliminally presented bodies (Experiment 1) and vice versa (Experiment 2). Both studies revealed strong support for integration effects, but not interference. Integration effects are most pronounced for low-emotional clarity facial and bodily expressions, suggesting that when more information is needed in one channel, the other channel is recruited to disentangle any ambiguity. That this occurs for briefly presented, backward-masked presentations reveals low-level visual integration of shared emotional signal value.
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页码:2271 / 2280
页数:9
相关论文
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