Perception of emotional tears with body postures,visual scenes,and written scenarios |
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Authors: | Kenichi Ito Chew Wei Ong |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada;2. School of Social Sciences, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore City, Singapore |
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Abstract: | Emotional tears tend to increase perceived sadness in facial expressions. However, it is unclear whether tears would still be seen as an indicator of sadness when a tearful face is observed in an emotional context (e.g., a touching moment during a wedding ceremony). We examine the influence of context on the sadness enhancement effect of tears in three studies. In Study 1, participants evaluated tearful or tearless expressions presented without body postures, with emotionally neutral postures, or with emotionally congruent postures (i.e., postures indicating the same emotion as the face). The results show that the presence of tears increases the perceived sadness of faces regardless of context. Similar results are found in Studies 2 and 3, which used visual scenes and written scenarios as contexts, respectively. Our findings demonstrate that tears on faces reliably indicate sadness, even in the presence of contextual information that suggests non-sadness emotions. |
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Keywords: | contexts emotion facial expressions perception sadness tears |
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