Ebook Expressive Control and Emotion Perception
Recent studies have linked expressive suppression to impairments in interpersonal functioning, but the mechanism underlying this relationship has not been well articulated. One possibility is that the individual who engages in expressive suppression is impaired in perceiving the emotions of others, a critical ability in successful interpersonal functioning. In the current study, participants were presented with a series of photographs of facial expressions that were manipulated so that they appeared to “morph” from neutral into full emotion expressions.
As they viewed these images, participants were instructed to identify the expression as quickly as possible, by selecting one of the six emotion labels (happiness, sadness, fear, anger, surprise, and disgust) on the screen. Prior to this task, participants were randomized to one of three groups: instructed to mimic the expressions on the screen, instructed to suppress all emotion expressions, or not given specific instructions on how to control expressions (the control group).
The speed with which participants accurately identified emotional expressions (emotion sensitivity) was the primary variable of interest. Overall, participants in the suppression condition were found to be slower to accurately identify emotions, while no statistically-significant differences were found between the mimicry and no-instructions conditions. The decreased emotion sensitivity in the suppression group could not be accounted for by impulsive responding, decreased sensitivity at full expression, or perceived difficulty of task.
Contents
Abstract
List of Figures
1. Functions of Emotion
2. Emotion Perception
- 2.1 Terminology
2.2 Emotion Perception as a Set of Abilities
3. Emotion Contagion, Mimicry, and Facial Feedback
4. Consequences of Impaired Emotion Perception
- 4.1 Impaired Perception of Happiness Expressions 4.2 Impaired Perception of Sadness Expressions
4.3 Impaired Perception of Fear Expressions
4.4 Impaired Perception of Anger Expressions
5. Enhanced Emotion Sensitivity
6. Individual Differences in Emotion Recognition Sensitivity
- 6.1 Gender Differences in Emotion Perception
6.2 Age and Emotion Perception
6.3 Cultural Differences and Emotion Perception
6.4 Psychopathology and Emotion Perception
7. Factors Affecting Emotion Perception Sensitivity
- 7.1 Cognitive Load
7.2 Mood Congruence
7.3 Medication and Perception
8. Management of Expressive Behavior
- 8.1 Expressive Suppression
8.2 Mimicry
9. The Current Study
10. Hypotheses
- 10.1 Main Effects of Condition
10.2 Main Effects of Emotion
10.3 Interaction between Condition and Emotion
10.4 Gender Differences
10.5 Impact of Instructions on Expression
11. Method
- 11.1 Participants
11.2 Measures
- 11.2.1 Demographic Information
11.2.2 Multimorph Facial Affect Recognition Task
11.3 Procedure
11.3.1 Suppression Instructions
11.3.2 Mimic Instructions
11.3.3 Control Instructions
11.4 Data Analytic Plan
12. Results
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