Literature DB >> 18284287

Placing the face in context: cultural differences in the perception of facial emotion.

Takahiko Masuda1, Phoebe C Ellsworth, Batja Mesquita, Janxin Leu, Shigehito Tanida, Ellen Van de Veerdonk.   

Abstract

Two studies tested the hypothesis that in judging people's emotions from their facial expressions, Japanese, more than Westerners, incorporate information from the social context. In Study 1, participants viewed cartoons depicting a happy, sad, angry, or neutral person surrounded by other people expressing the same emotion as the central person or a different one. The surrounding people's emotions influenced Japanese but not Westerners' perceptions of the central person. These differences reflect differences in attention, as indicated by eye-tracking data (Study 2): Japanese looked at the surrounding people more than did Westerners. Previous findings on East-West differences in contextual sensitivity generalize to social contexts, suggesting that Westerners see emotions as individual feelings, whereas Japanese see them as inseparable from the feelings of the group.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18284287     DOI: 10.1037/0022-3514.94.3.365

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers Soc Psychol        ISSN: 0022-3514


  77 in total

1.  Attention to context: U.S. and Japanese children's emotional judgments.

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2.  Emotion words shape emotion percepts.

Authors:  Maria Gendron; Kristen A Lindquist; Lawrence Barsalou; Lisa Feldman Barrett
Journal:  Emotion       Date:  2012-02-06

3.  Culture and emotion regulation.

Authors:  Brett Q Ford; Iris B Mauss
Journal:  Curr Opin Psychol       Date:  2015-06-01

4.  How does context affect assessments of facial emotion? The role of culture and age.

Authors:  Seon-Gyu Ko; Tae-Ho Lee; Hyea-Young Yoon; Jung-Hye Kwon; Mara Mather
Journal:  Psychol Aging       Date:  2011-03

Review 5.  Revisiting diversity: cultural variation reveals the constructed nature of emotion perception.

Authors:  Maria Gendron
Journal:  Curr Opin Psychol       Date:  2017-07-18

6.  Gender-selective neural populations: evidence from event-related fMRI repetition suppression.

Authors:  Samantha K Podrebarac; Melvyn A Goodale; Rick van der Zwan; Jacqueline C Snow
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2013-02-24       Impact factor: 1.972

7.  Lost in Datafication? - A Typology of (Emotion) Data Contextualization.

Authors:  Jörg Lehmann; Elisabeth Huber
Journal:  Integr Psychol Behav Sci       Date:  2019-09

8.  Dietary hydroxycinnamates prevent oxidative damages to liver, spleen, and bone marrow cells in irradiation-exposed mice.

Authors:  Sung-Ho Kook; Sa-Ra Cheon; Jae-Hwan Kim; Ki-Choon Choi; Min-Kook Kim; Jeong-Chae Lee
Journal:  Food Sci Biotechnol       Date:  2017-02-28       Impact factor: 2.391

9.  A cross-cultural comparison of autistic traits in the UK, India and Malaysia.

Authors:  Megan Freeth; Elizabeth Sheppard; Rajani Ramachandran; Elizabeth Milne
Journal:  J Autism Dev Disord       Date:  2013-11

10.  Cultural differences in gaze and emotion recognition: Americans contrast more than Chinese.

Authors:  Jennifer Tehan Stanley; Xin Zhang; Helene H Fung; Derek M Isaacowitz
Journal:  Emotion       Date:  2012-08-13
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