Literature DB >> 30208429

Transmitting and decoding facial expressions of emotion during healthy aging: More similarities than differences.

Marie L Smith1, Daniel Grühn2, Ann Bevitt1, Mark Ellis1, Oana Ciripan1, Susan Scrimgeour1, Michael Papasavva1, Louise Ewing1,3,4.   

Abstract

Older adults tend to perform more poorly than younger adults on emotional expression identification tasks. The goal of the present study was to test a processing mechanism that might explain these differences in emotion recognition-specifically, age-related variation in the utilization of specific visual cues. Seventeen younger and 17 older adults completed a reverse-correlation emotion categorization task (Bubbles paradigm), consisting of a large number of trials in each of which only part of the visual information used to convey an emotional facial expression was revealed to participants. The task allowed us to pinpoint the visual features each group used systematically to correctly recognize the emotional expressions shown. To address the possibility that faces of different age groups are differently processed by younger and older adults, we included younger, middle-aged, and older adult face models displaying happy, fearful, angry, disgusted, and sad facial expressions. Our results reveal strong similarity in the utilization of visual information by younger and older adult participants in decoding the emotional expressions from faces across ages-particularly for happy and fear emotions. These findings suggest that age-related differences in strategic information use are unlikely to contribute to the decline of facial expression recognition skills observed in later life.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30208429     DOI: 10.1167/18.9.10

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vis        ISSN: 1534-7362            Impact factor:   2.240


  4 in total

1.  Foveal processing of emotion-informative facial features.

Authors:  Nazire Duran; Anthony P Atkinson
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-12-02       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  General cognitive decline does not account for older adults' worse emotion recognition and theory of mind.

Authors:  Qiuyi Kong; Nicholas Currie; Kangning Du; Ted Ruffman
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-04-26       Impact factor: 4.996

3.  The Effects of Separate Facial Areas on Emotion Recognition in Different Adult Age Groups: A Laboratory and a Naturalistic Study.

Authors:  Larissa L Faustmann; Lara Eckhardt; Pauline S Hamann; Mareike Altgassen
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-06-30

Review 4.  A Systematic Review of the Role of Oxytocin, Cortisol, and Testosterone in Facial Emotional Processing.

Authors:  Ángel Romero-Martínez; Carolina Sarrate-Costa; Luis Moya-Albiol
Journal:  Biology (Basel)       Date:  2021-12-15
  4 in total

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