Your Face and Moves Seem Happier When I Smile

Author:

Marmolejo-Ramos Fernando1,Murata Aiko2,Sasaki Kyoshiro345,Yamada Yuki4,Ikeda Ayumi6,Hinojosa José A.789,Watanabe Katsumi310,Parzuchowski Michal11,Tirado Carlos12,Ospina Raydonal13

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Change and Complexity in Learning, The University of South Australia, Australia

2. NTT Communication Science Laboratories, Kyoto, Japan

3. Faculty of Science and Engineering, Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan

4. Faculty of Arts and Science, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan

5. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Tokyo, Japan

6. Graduate School of Human-Environment Studies, Kyushu University, Japan

7. Instituto Pluridisciplinar, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain

8. Dpto. Psicología Experimental, Procesos Cognitivos y Logopedia, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain

9. Facultad de Lenguas y Educación, Universidad de Nebrija, Madrid, Spain

10. Art & Design, University of New South Wales, Australia

11. Centre of Research on Cognition and Behaviour, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Sopot, Poland

12. Gösta Ekman Laboratory, Department of Psychology, Stockholm University, Sweden

13. Departamento de Estatística, CAST Laboratory, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, Brazil

Abstract

Abstract. In this experiment, we replicated the effect of muscle engagement on perception such that the recognition of another’s facial expressions was biased by the observer’s facial muscular activity (Blaesi & Wilson, 2010). We extended this replication to show that such a modulatory effect is also observed for the recognition of dynamic bodily expressions. Via a multilab and within-subjects approach, we investigated the emotion recognition of point-light biological walkers, along with that of morphed face stimuli, while subjects were or were not holding a pen in their teeth. Under the “pen-in-the-teeth” condition, participants tended to lower their threshold of perception of happy expressions in facial stimuli compared to the “no-pen” condition, thus replicating the experiment by Blaesi and Wilson (2010). A similar effect was found for the biological motion stimuli such that participants lowered their threshold to perceive happy walkers in the pen-in-the-teeth condition compared to the no-pen condition. This pattern of results was also found in a second experiment in which the no-pen condition was replaced by a situation in which participants held a pen in their lips (“pen-in-lips” condition). These results suggested that facial muscular activity alters the recognition of not only facial expressions but also bodily expressions.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

General Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,General Medicine

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