Watching people talk about their emotions: Inferences in response to full-face vs. profile expressions |
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Authors: | Marilyn Mendolia Robert E. Kleck |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institute for Behavioral Research, 111 Barrow Hall, University of Georgia, 30602 Athens, Georgia;(2) Dartmouth College, USA |
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Abstract: | Young adults talked to an experimenter about their emotional reactions to video episodes intended to evoke either negative or positive affect. Facial behavior was simultaneously videotaped from three perspectives (full-face, a 90° right profile, and a 90° left profile) without their awareness. Judges viewed a subset of dynamic expressions in one of the three facial perspectives in either normal or mirror-reversed orientation. While subjects talked about a negative affect elicitor, the left hemiface and the full-face were perceived as more expressive than the right hemiface. The left hemiface, in reversed orientation, was perceived to display more emotion than the same expression in original orientation for positive or negative affect. These results are discussed in the context of the literature exploring hemifacial differences in emotional expression and mouth asymmetry during propositional speech. |
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