Zygomaticus activation through facial neuromuscular electrical stimulation (fNMES) induces happiness perception in ambiguous facial expressions and affects neural correlates of face processing

Author:

Efthimiou Themis Nikolas1ORCID,Baker Joshua1ORCID,Clarke Alasdair1,Elsenaar Arthur2,Mehu Marc3ORCID,Korb Sebastian14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of Essex , Colchester CO4 3SQ, United Kingdom

2. ArtScience Interfaculty, Royal Academy of Art, Royal Conservatory , The Hague 2514 AN, Netherlands

3. Department of Psychology, Webster Vienna Private University , Vienna 1020, Austria

4. Department of Cognition, Emotion, and Methods in Psychology, University of Vienna , Vienna 1010, Austria

Abstract

Abstract The role of facial feedback in facial emotion recognition remains controversial, partly due to limitations of the existing methods to manipulate the activation of facial muscles, such as voluntary posing of facial expressions or holding a pen in the mouth. These procedures are indeed limited in their control over which muscles are (de)activated when and to what degree. To overcome these limitations and investigate in a more controlled way if facial emotion recognition is modulated by one’s facial muscle activity, we used computer-controlled facial neuromuscular electrical stimulation (fNMES). In a pre-registered EEG experiment, ambiguous facial expressions were categorised as happy or sad by 47 participants. In half of the trials, weak smiling was induced through fNMES delivered to the bilateral Zygomaticus Major muscle for 500 ms. The likelihood of categorising ambiguous facial expressions as happy was significantly increased with fNMES, as shown with frequentist and Bayesian linear mixed models. Further, fNMES resulted in a reduction of P1, N170 and LPP amplitudes. These findings suggest that fNMES-induced facial feedback can bias facial emotion recognition and modulate the neural correlates of face processing. We conclude that fNMES has potential as a tool for studying the effects of facial feedback.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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