Recognition of others' emotions is a key life ability that guides one's own choices and behavior, and it hinges on the recognition of others' facial cues. Independent studies indicate that facial appearance-based evaluations affect social behavior, but little is known about how facial appearance-based trustworthiness evaluations influence the recognition of specific emotions. We tested the hypothesis that first impressions based on facial appearance affect the recognition of basic emotions. A total of 150 participants completed a dynamic emotion recognition task. In a within-subjects design, the participants viewed videos of individuals with trustworthy-looking, neutral, or untrustworthy-looking faces gradually and continuously displaying basic emotions (happiness, anger, fear, and sadness). The participants' accuracy and speed in recognizing the emotions were measured. Untrustworthy-looking faces decreased participants' emotion recognition accuracy and speed, across emotion types. In addition, faces that elicited a positive inference of trustworthiness enhanced emotion recognition speed of fear and sadness, emotional expressions that signal another's distress and modulate prosocial behavior. These findings suggest that facial appearance-based inferences may interfere with the ability to accurately and rapidly recognize others' basic emotions.

First impression misleads emotion recognition / Colonnello, V., Russo, P.M., Mattarozzi, K.. - In: FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY. - ISSN 1664-1078. - 10:(2019), pp. 1-6. [10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00527]

First impression misleads emotion recognition

Valentina Colonnello;Paolo Maria Russo;Katia Mattarozzi
2019

Abstract

Recognition of others' emotions is a key life ability that guides one's own choices and behavior, and it hinges on the recognition of others' facial cues. Independent studies indicate that facial appearance-based evaluations affect social behavior, but little is known about how facial appearance-based trustworthiness evaluations influence the recognition of specific emotions. We tested the hypothesis that first impressions based on facial appearance affect the recognition of basic emotions. A total of 150 participants completed a dynamic emotion recognition task. In a within-subjects design, the participants viewed videos of individuals with trustworthy-looking, neutral, or untrustworthy-looking faces gradually and continuously displaying basic emotions (happiness, anger, fear, and sadness). The participants' accuracy and speed in recognizing the emotions were measured. Untrustworthy-looking faces decreased participants' emotion recognition accuracy and speed, across emotion types. In addition, faces that elicited a positive inference of trustworthiness enhanced emotion recognition speed of fear and sadness, emotional expressions that signal another's distress and modulate prosocial behavior. These findings suggest that facial appearance-based inferences may interfere with the ability to accurately and rapidly recognize others' basic emotions.
2019
emotion recognition; interpersonal interaction; social behavior; social perception; trustworthiness
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
First impression misleads emotion recognition / Colonnello, V., Russo, P.M., Mattarozzi, K.. - In: FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY. - ISSN 1664-1078. - 10:(2019), pp. 1-6. [10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00527]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1768919
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