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Searching for happiness across cultures

Lookup NU author(s): Dr Panos Athanasopoulos

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Abstract

Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search task. Caucasian-English and Japanese participants were required to search for an angry or happy discrepant face target against an array of competing distractor faces. Both cultural groups performed the task with displays that consisted of Caucasian and Japanese faces in order to investigate the effects of racial congruence on emotion detection performance. Under high perceptual load conditions, both cultural groups detected the happy face more efficiently than the angry face. When perceptual load was reduced such that target detection could be achieved by feature-matching, the English group continued to show a happiness advantage in search performance that was more strongly pronounced for other race faces. Japanese participants showed search time equivalence for happy and angry targets. Experiment 3 encouraged participants to adopt a perceptual based strategy for target detection by removing the term 'emotion' from the instructions. Whilst this manipulation did not alter the happiness advantage displayed by our English group, it reinstated it for our Japanese group, who showed a detection advantage for happiness only for other race faces. The results demonstrate cultural and linguistic modifiers on the perceptual saliency of the emotional signal and provide new converging evidence from cognitive psychology for the interactionist perspective on emotional expression recognition.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Athanasopoulos P; Damjanovic L; Roberson D; Kasai C; Dyson M

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Journal of Cognition and Culture

Year: 2010

Volume: 10

Issue: 1

Pages: 85-107

Print publication date: 01/04/2010

ISSN (print): 1567-7095

ISSN (electronic): 1568-5373

Publisher: Brill

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853710X497185

DOI: 10.1163/156853710X497185


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