| Literature DB >> 24278456 |
Samuel Krüger1, Alexander N Sokolov, Paul Enck, Ingeborg Krägeloh-Mann, Marina A Pavlova.
Abstract
Body language reading is of significance for daily life social cognition and successful social interaction, and constitutes a core component of social competence. Yet it is unclear whether our ability for body language reading is gender specific. In the present work, female and male observers had to visually recognize emotions through point-light human locomotion performed by female and male actors with different emotional expressions. For subtle emotional expressions only, males surpass females in recognition accuracy and readiness to respond to happy walking portrayed by female actors, whereas females exhibit a tendency to be better in recognition of hostile angry locomotion expressed by male actors. In contrast to widespread beliefs about female superiority in social cognition, the findings suggest that gender effects in recognition of emotions from human locomotion are modulated by emotional content of actions and opposite actor gender. In a nutshell, the study makes a further step in elucidation of gender impact on body language reading and on neurodevelopmental and psychiatric deficits in visual social cognition.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24278456 PMCID: PMC3838416 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0081716
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Illustration of stimuli.
Four static images illustrating angry human walking as a set of dots placed on the main joints and head of an invisible actor body. Each display consists of 15 white dots presented against a black background. During locomotion, a walker was seen facing right in intermediate position (45°) between the frontal and sagittal view.
Figure 2Recognition of subtle expressions of angry and happy point-light locomotion.
A) Proportion correct: Males over-perform females in recognition accuracy of happy walking portrayed by female actors, whereas females exhibit a tendency to be better in recognition of angry locomotion expressed by male actors. B) Error rate: The lack of gender differences in error rate indicates that gender differences are not caused by gender-related bias for mistaking one emotion for another. C) Response time: Males are faster than females in responding to happy walking portrayed by female actors. Asterisks indicate significant gender differences, whereas asterisks in brackets indicate a tendency. Vertical bars represent ±SE.