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Smiling and sad wrinkles: Age-related changes in the face and the perception of emotions and intentions
Authors:Ursula Hess  Reginald B. Adams  Annie Simard  Michael T. Stevenson  Robert E. Kleck
Affiliation:1. Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany;2. The Pennsylvania State University, USA;3. University of Quebec at Montreal, Canada;4. Dartmouth College, USA
Abstract:There is a common belief that wrinkles in the aging face reflect frequently experienced emotions and hence resemble these affective displays. This implies that the wrinkles and folds in elderly faces interfere with the perception of other emotions currently experienced by the elderly as well as with the inferences perceivers draw from these expressions. Whereas there is ample research on the impact of aging on emotion recognition, almost no research has focused on how emotions expressed by the elderly are perceived by others. The present research addresses this latter question. Young participants rated the emotion expressions and behavioral intentions of old and young faces displaying identical expressions. The findings suggest that emotions shown on older faces have reduced signal clarity and may consequently have less impact on inferences regarding behavioral intentions. Both effects can be expected to have negative consequences for rapport achieved in everyday interactions involving the elderly.
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