跨文化和半球偏侧性对面部人群整体情绪编码的影响。

Culture and Brain Pub Date : 2017-10-01 Epub Date: 2017-10-30 DOI:10.1007/s40167-017-0054-y
Hee Yeon Im, Sang Chul Chong, Jisoo Sun, Troy G Steiner, Daniel N Albohn, Reginald B Adams, Kestutis Kveraga
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引用次数: 14

摘要

在许多社交场合,我们会根据人们的整体情绪(称为“群体情绪”)对人群做出快速判断。虽然阅读群体情绪对人际动力学至关重要,但这一过程的社会文化方面尚未得到探讨。目前的研究考察了文化如何调节韩国和美国观察者对群体情绪的处理。韩国和美国(非东亚)的参与者被简短地展示了两组表情各异的面孔,并被要求在两组面孔中选择他们宁愿避开的那一组。我们发现韩国参与者总体上比美国参与者更准确,这与文化观点的框架一致:东亚人与西方人的整体处理与分析处理。此外,我们还发现,在两种文化群体中,其他种族的人群都有速度优势。最后,我们发现了不同的半球侧化模式:美国参与者在左视野中比在右视野中更准确地感知到需要避免的面部人群,这表明欧洲、美国和韩国的面部人群在处理人群情绪方面具有右半球优势。然而,韩国参与者表现出微弱或不存在的偏侧效应,对欧美面孔人群有轻微的右半球优势,而在感知韩国面孔人群方面没有优势。相反,韩国参与者对自己种族的面孔表现出积极的情绪偏见。这项研究表明,文化在调节我们对一组面孔的群体情感感知和对它们的反应方面起着重要作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Cross-cultural and hemispheric laterality effects on the ensemble coding of emotion in facial crowds.

In many social situations, we make a snap judgment about crowds of people relying on their overall mood (termed "crowd emotion"). Although reading crowd emotion is critical for interpersonal dynamics, the sociocultural aspects of this process have not been explored. The current study examined how culture modulates the processing of crowd emotion in Korean and American observers. Korean and American (non-East Asian) participants were briefly presented with two groups of faces that were individually varying in emotional expressions and asked to choose which group between the two they would rather avoid. We found that Korean participants were more accurate than American participants overall, in line with the framework on cultural viewpoints: Holistic versus analytic processing in East Asians versus Westerners. Moreover, we found a speed advantage for other-race crowds in both cultural groups. Finally, we found different hemispheric lateralization patterns: American participants were more accurate to perceive the facial crowd to be avoided when it was presented in the left visual field than the right visual field, indicating a right hemisphere advantage for processing crowd emotion of both European American and Korean facial crowds. However, Korean participants showed weak or nonexistent laterality effects, with a slight right hemisphere advantage for European American facial crowds and no advantage in perceiving Korean facial crowds. Instead, Korean participants showed positive emotion bias for own-race faces. This work suggests that culture plays a role in modulating our crowd emotion perception of groups of faces and responses to them.

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