The current study tested whether the perception of angry faces is cross-culturally privileged over that of happy faces, by comparing perception of the offset of emotion in a dynamic flow of expressions. Thirty Chinese and 30 European-American participants saw movies that morphed an anger expression into a happy expression of the same stimulus person, or vice versa. Participants were asked to stop the movie at the point where they ceased seeing the initial emotion. As expected, participants cross-culturally continued to perceive anger longer than happiness. Moreover, anger was perceived longer in in-group than in out-group faces. The effects were driven by female rather than male targets. Results are discussed with reference to the important...
Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search ta...
Two studies tested the hypothesis that in judging people's emotions from their facial expressions, J...
Two studies tested the hypothesis that in judging people’s emotions from their facial expressions, J...
Angry faces are important cues of threat that should be expected to be salient across cultures. In t...
Past research suggests that East Asians (Easterners) are more likely than North Americans and Wester...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search ta...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
The magnitude of the happy categorisation advantage, the faster recognition of happiness than negati...
Rapid identification of facial expressions can profoundly affect social interactions, yet most resea...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
To perceive facial expressions is suggested to be universal. However, studies have shown the in-grou...
It is well established that East Asians (Easterners) are poorer at categorizing some emotional facia...
The aim of the present study was to investigate which affective component guides cognitive processin...
Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search ta...
Two studies tested the hypothesis that in judging people's emotions from their facial expressions, J...
Two studies tested the hypothesis that in judging people’s emotions from their facial expressions, J...
Angry faces are important cues of threat that should be expected to be salient across cultures. In t...
Past research suggests that East Asians (Easterners) are more likely than North Americans and Wester...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search ta...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
The magnitude of the happy categorisation advantage, the faster recognition of happiness than negati...
Rapid identification of facial expressions can profoundly affect social interactions, yet most resea...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
To perceive facial expressions is suggested to be universal. However, studies have shown the in-grou...
It is well established that East Asians (Easterners) are poorer at categorizing some emotional facia...
The aim of the present study was to investigate which affective component guides cognitive processin...
Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search ta...
Two studies tested the hypothesis that in judging people's emotions from their facial expressions, J...
Two studies tested the hypothesis that in judging people’s emotions from their facial expressions, J...