Literature DB >> 19485610

Young and older emotional faces: are there age group differences in expression identification and memory?

Natalie C Ebner1, Marcia K Johnson.   

Abstract

Studies have found that older compared with young adults are less able to identify facial expressions and have worse memory for negative than for positive faces, but those studies have used only young faces. Studies finding that both age groups are more accurate at recognizing faces of their own than other ages have used mostly neutral faces. Thus, age differences in processing faces may not extend to older faces, and preferential memory for own age faces may not extend to emotional faces. To investigate these possibilities, young and older participants viewed young and older faces presented either with happy, angry, or neutral expressions; participants identified the expressions displayed and then completed a surprise face recognition task. Older compared with young participants were less able to identify expressions of angry young and older faces and (based on participants' categorizations) remembered angry faces less well than happy faces. There was no evidence of an own age bias in memory, but self-reported frequency of contact with young and older adults and awareness of own emotions played a role in expression identification of and memory for young and older faces.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19485610      PMCID: PMC2859895          DOI: 10.1037/a0015179

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


  42 in total

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10.  Age and emotion affect how we look at a face: visual scan patterns differ for own-age versus other-age emotional faces.

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