“There Is No Face Like Home”: Ratings for Cultural Familiarity to Own and Other Facial Dialects of Emotion With and Without Conscious Awareness in a British Sample

Author:

Tsikandilakis Myron1ORCID,Kausel Leonie2,Boncompte Gonzalo3,Yu Zhaoliang4,Oxner Matt5,Lanfranco Renzo6,Bali Persefoni7,Urale Poutasi5,Peirce Jonathan7,López Vladimir3,Tong Eddie Mun Wai4,William Hayward8,Carmel David9,Derrfuss Jan7,Chapman Peter7

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, UK; Medical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, UK

2. Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile

3. School of Psychology, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile

4. Department of Psychology, National University of Singapore, Singapore

5. School of Psychology, The University of Auckland, New Zealand

6. Department of Psychology, The University of Edinburgh, UK; Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, University Psychiatric Clinic, Faculty of Medicine, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile

7. School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, UK

8. School of Psychology, The University of Auckland, New Zealand; School of Psychology, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

9. Department of Psychology, The University of Edinburgh, UK

Abstract

The dialects theory of cross-cultural communication suggests that due to culture-specific characteristics in the expression of emotion, we can recognise own-culture emotional expressions more accurately than other-culture emotional expressions. This effect is suggested to occur due to the nonconvergent social evolution that takes place in different geographical regions. Based on the evolutionary value of own-culture social signals, previous research has suggested that own-culture emotional expressions can be appraised without conscious awareness. The current study tested this hypothesis. We developed, validated, and made open access what is to our knowledge the first labelled, multicultural facial stimuli set, including freely expressed and Facial Action Coding System instructed emotional expressions. We assessed emotional recognition and cultural familiarity responses during brief backward-masked presentations in British participants. We found that emotional recognition and cultural familiarity were higher for own-culture faces. A Bayesian analysis of face-detection and emotional-recognition performance revealed that faces were not processed subliminally. Further analysis of awareness, using hits (correct detection/recognition) and misses (incorrect detection/recognition), showed that face-detection hits were a necessary condition for reporting higher familiarity for own-culture faces. These findings suggest that the own-culture emotional recognition advantage is preserved under conditions of backwards masking and that the appraisal of cultural familiarity involves conscious awareness.

Funder

Universitas 21

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Ophthalmology

Reference85 articles.

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