Lay theories about emotion recognition explain cultural differences in willingness to wear facial masks during the COVID-19 pandemic

Fatima Z. Nayani , Masaki Yuki , William W. Maddux , Joanna Schug
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Abstract

Given that mask-wearing proved to be an important tool to slow the spread of infection during the COVID-19 pandemic, investigating the psychological and cultural factors that influence norms for mask wearing across cultures is exceptionally important. One factor that may influence mask wearing behavior is the degree to which people believe masks potentially impair emotion recognition. Based on previous research suggesting that there may be cultural differences in facial regions that people in Japan and the United States attend to when inferring a target's emotional state, we predicted that Americans would perceive masks (which cover the mouth) as more likely to impair emotion recognition, whereas Japanese would perceive facial coverings that conceal the eye region (sunglasses) to be more likely to impair emotion recognition. The results showed that Japanese participants reported wearing masks more than Americans. Americans also reported higher expected difficulty in interpreting emotions of individuals wearing masks (vs. sunglasses), while Japanese reported the reverse effect. Importantly, expectations about the negative impact of facial masks on emotion recognition explained cultural differences in mask-wearing behavior, even accounting for existing social norms

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关于情绪识别的非专业理论解释了COVID-19大流行期间戴口罩意愿的文化差异
鉴于在新冠肺炎大流行期间,戴口罩被证明是减缓感染传播的重要工具,调查影响不同文化戴口罩规范的心理和文化因素尤为重要。可能影响戴口罩行为的一个因素是人们认为口罩可能损害情绪识别的程度。基于先前的研究表明,日本和美国的人在推断目标的情绪状态时,面部区域可能存在文化差异,我们预测美国人会认为口罩(覆盖嘴巴)更有可能损害情绪识别,而日本人会认为隐藏眼睛区域的面部遮盖物(太阳镜)更有可能损害情绪识别。结果显示,据报道,日本参与者比美国人更多地戴口罩。美国人也报告说,戴口罩的人在解读情绪方面的预期难度更高(与太阳镜相比),而日本人则报告了相反的效果。重要的是,对口罩对情绪识别的负面影响的预期解释了戴口罩行为的文化差异,甚至考虑到了现有的社会规范
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CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
140 days
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