| Literature DB >> 29497222 |
Corine Dijk1, Agneta H Fischer2, Nexhmedin Morina3, Charlotte van Eeuwijk4, Gerben A van Kleef2.
Abstract
Socially anxiety may be related to a different pattern of facial mimicry and contagion of others' emotions. We report two studies in which participants with different levels of social anxiety reacted to others' emotional displays, either shown on a computer screen (Study 1) or in an actual social interaction (Study 2). Study 1 examined facial mimicry and emotional contagion in response to displays of happiness, anger, fear, and contempt. Participants mimicked negative and positive emotions to some extent, but we found no relation between mimicry and the social anxiety level of the participants. Furthermore, socially anxious individuals were more prone to experience negative emotions and felt more irritated in response to negative emotion displays. In Study 2, we found that social anxiety was related to enhanced mimicry of smiling, but this was only the case for polite smiles and not for enjoyment smiles. These results suggest that socially anxious individuals tend to catch negative emotions from others, but suppress their expression by mimicking positive displays. This may be explained by the tendency of socially anxious individuals to avoid conflict or rejection.Entities:
Keywords: Emotional contagion; Emotional mimicry; Facial expression; Social anxiety
Year: 2017 PMID: 29497222 PMCID: PMC5816123 DOI: 10.1007/s10919-017-0266-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nonverbal Behav ISSN: 0191-5886
Means (and standard deviations) of the coded expression and experienced emotions and their correlation with the SIAS (study 1)
| Expression displayed in clip | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neutral | Happy | Contempt | Fear | Anger | ||||||
| M (SD) | rsias | M (SD) | rsias | M (SD) | rsias | M (SD) | rsias | M (SD) | rsias | |
| Happy | ||||||||||
| Cheek raiser (AU6) | .20 (.24) | .04 | .29 (.23) | .12 | .26 (.26) | .14 | .27 (.27) | .12 | .26 (.27) | .05 |
| Lip corner puller (AU12) | − .44 (.70) | − .14 | − .04 (.69) | − .08 | − .20 (.65) | − .11 | − .17 (.72) | − .09 | − .30 (.66) | − .20 |
| Feeling happy | 45.99 (17.59) | − .20** | 75.45 (15.22) | − .08 | 50.74 (21.27) | − .20* | 48.11 (21.76) | − .21** | 45.79 (24.99) | − .25** |
| Contempt | ||||||||||
| Outer brow Raiser (AU2) | − .25 (.30) | .08 | − .24 (.31) | .12 | − .21 (.31) | .12 | − .23 (.32) | .17 | − .24 (.27) | .18 |
| Dimpler (AU14) | 1.09 (.48) | − .16 | 1.23 (.55) | − .13 | 1.14 (.51) | − .01 | 1.13 (.47) | − .12 | 1.10 (.48) | − .11 |
| Feeling contempt | 11.66 (48.53) | .09 | 6.44 (11.47) | .16 | 21.59 (22.17) | .17 | 12.87 (16.10) | .12 | 14.51 (18.49) | .16 |
| Fear | ||||||||||
| Upper lid raiser (AU5) | − .54 (.15) | .08 | − .55 (.13) | .06 | − .56 (.13) | .09 | − .55 (.14) | .13 | − .55 (.13) | .07 |
| Lip stretcher (AU20) | 1.34 (.41) | − .06 | 1.33 (.39) | − .02 | 1.33 (.49) | − .06 | 1.34 (.45) | − .04 | 1.36 (.44) | − .14 |
| Feeling nervous | 22.65 (21.85) | .39** | 9.26 (13.03) | .50** | 17.80 (21.10) | .46** | 21.84 (22.46) | .49** | 19.34 (22.26) | .34** |
| Anger | ||||||||||
| Brow lowerer (AU4) | − .01 (.17) | .18 | − .05 (.19) | .12 | − .02 (.20) | .12 | − .03 (.19) | .10 | − .03 (.19) | .13 |
| Lip tightener (AU23) | 1.01 (.33) | − .19 | .97 (.34) | − .14 | .99 (.36) | − .14 | 1.01 (.31) | − .13 | .98 (.36) | − .18 |
| Feeling irritation | 12.10 (14.91) | .16 | 5.86 (10.03) | .16 | 22.57 (23.56) | .27** | 15.08 (18.49) | .25** | 21.24 (23.88) | .29** |
For the correlations with the coded expressions (AUs) the df = 92, for the correlations with the experienced emotions the df = 103
* p < .05
** p < .01
Means (and standard deviations) of the coded expression before and after the assistant’s display and their correlation with the SIAS (Study 2)
| Before expression | After expression | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| |||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |||
| Smile | ||||||||
| Cheek raiser (AU6) | .56 (.34) | − .06 | 44 | .687 | .82 (.40) | .06 | 44 | .714 |
| Lip corner puller (AU12) | .51 (.61) | − .08 | 44 | .609 | .95 (.68) | .06 | 44 | .696 |
| Frown | ||||||||
| Brow lowerer (AU4) | − .19 (.22) | .14 | 43 | .354 | − .18 (.22) | .13 | 43 | .392 |
Fig. 1Graphical display of the interaction between social anxiety and timing for the intensity of the use of AU12 (Lip Corner Puller) using a median split of the SIAS