Literature DB >> 16187863

Social categorization and the perception of facial affect: target race moderates the response latency advantage for happy faces.

Kurt Hugenberg1.   

Abstract

Two experiments competitively test 3 potential mechanisms (negativity inhibiting responses, feature-based accounts, and evaluative context) for the response latency advantage for recognizing happy expressions by investigating how the race of a target can moderate the strength of the effect. Both experiments indicate that target race modulates the happy face advantage, such that European American participants displayed the happy face advantage for White target faces, but displayed a response latency advantage for angry (Experiments 1 and 2) and sad (Experiment 2) Black target faces. This pattern of findings is consistent with an evaluative context mechanism and inconsistent with negativity inhibition and feature-based accounts of the happy face advantage. Thus, the race of a target face provides an evaluative context in which facial expressions are categorized. ((c) 2005 APA, all rights reserved).

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16187863     DOI: 10.1037/1528-3542.5.3.267

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Emotion        ISSN: 1528-3542


  20 in total

1.  Performance of facial expression classification tasks in patients with obstructive sleep apnea.

Authors:  Junfeng Guo; Yingjuan Ma; Zhenhua Liu; Fumin Wang; Xunyao Hou; Jian Chen; Yan Hong; Song Xu; Xueping Liu
Journal:  J Clin Sleep Med       Date:  2020-04-15       Impact factor: 4.062

2.  When a face type is perceived as threatening: Using general recognition theory to understand biased categorization of Afrocentric faces.

Authors:  Heather M Kleider-Offutt; Alesha D Bond; Sarah E Williams; Corey J Bohil
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2018-07

3.  How White American Children Develop Racial Biases in Emotion Reasoning.

Authors:  Ashley L Ruba; Ryan McMurty; Sarah E Gaither; Makeba Parramore Wilbourn
Journal:  Affect Sci       Date:  2022-04-01

4.  On the Automatic Nature of Threat: Physiological and Evaluative Reactions to Survival-Threats Outside Conscious Perception.

Authors:  David S March; Lowell Gaertner; Michael A Olson
Journal:  Affect Sci       Date:  2022-01-07

5.  Multiple Cues in Social Perception: The Time Course of Processing Race and Facial Expression.

Authors:  Jennifer T Kubota; Tiffany A Ito
Journal:  J Exp Soc Psychol       Date:  2007-09

6.  Spatial and feature-based attention to expressive faces.

Authors:  Kestutis Kveraga; David De Vito; Cody Cushing; Hee Yeon Im; Daniel N Albohn; Reginald B Adams
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2019-01-25       Impact factor: 1.972

7.  Social Vision: Functional Forecasting and the Integration of Compound Social Cues.

Authors:  Reginald B Adams; Kestutis Kveraga
Journal:  Rev Philos Psychol       Date:  2015-05-07

8.  Pretty crowds are happy crowds: the influence of attractiveness on mood perception.

Authors:  Alica Mertens; Johanna Hepp; Andreas Voss; Amelie Hische
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2020-05-25

9.  Context modulation of facial emotion perception differed by individual difference.

Authors:  Tae-Ho Lee; June-Seek Choi; Yang Seok Cho
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-03-14       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Faces in context: a review and systematization of contextual influences on affective face processing.

Authors:  Matthias J Wieser; Tobias Brosch
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2012-11-02
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