Quickly and accurately recognizing emotional cues in a collective, referred to as emotional aperture, has been posited to be important for navigating social contexts. This ability, therefore, may be particularly strong among those who live within culturally situated collectivist contexts. In this research, we examined evidence for this variability in recognizing collective emotions across cultures by comparing Chinese and Americans’ performance on an emotional aperture task. We found that Chinese were indeed more accurate in recognizing collective emotions as compared with Americans. This was mediated by cultural variability in global (vs. local) processing. We discuss how these findings contribute to our understanding of culture and collec...
According to the Universality Hypothesis, facial expressions of emotion comprise a universal set of ...
Past research suggests that East Asians (Easterners) are more likely than North Americans and Wester...
Previous research suggests that individuals from individualistic and collectivistic cultures, due to...
It is well established that East Asians (Easterners) are poorer at categorizing some emotional facia...
Evidence that culture modulates on-line neural responses to the emotional meanings encoded by vocal ...
Previous research on culture and emotion questioned whether emotions are universal or culture-specif...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
Do members of different cultures express (or "encode") emotions in the same fashion? How well can me...
In human-to-human contexts, display rules provide an empirically sound construct to explain intercul...
Culture and gender shape emotion experience and regulation, in part because the value placed on emot...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
Over the last decade, significant empirical research has examined the influence of culture on a vari...
According to the Universality Hypothesis, facial expressions of emotion comprise a universal set of ...
Past research suggests that East Asians (Easterners) are more likely than North Americans and Wester...
Previous research suggests that individuals from individualistic and collectivistic cultures, due to...
It is well established that East Asians (Easterners) are poorer at categorizing some emotional facia...
Evidence that culture modulates on-line neural responses to the emotional meanings encoded by vocal ...
Previous research on culture and emotion questioned whether emotions are universal or culture-specif...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
Do members of different cultures express (or "encode") emotions in the same fashion? How well can me...
In human-to-human contexts, display rules provide an empirically sound construct to explain intercul...
Culture and gender shape emotion experience and regulation, in part because the value placed on emot...
Emotional facial expressions provide important nonverbal cues in human interactions. The perception ...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
Over the last decade, significant empirical research has examined the influence of culture on a vari...
According to the Universality Hypothesis, facial expressions of emotion comprise a universal set of ...
Past research suggests that East Asians (Easterners) are more likely than North Americans and Wester...
Previous research suggests that individuals from individualistic and collectivistic cultures, due to...