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Similarities and Variations in Facial Expressions of Emotions: Cross‐cultural Evidence
19
Citations
18
References
1996
Year
EthnicityAffective VariableIndian ObserversSocial PsychologyAffective NeuroscienceEducationPsychologySocial SciencesAffective ScienceEmotional ResponseFacial ExpressionsEmotional ExpressionFacial EmotionsNorth AmericanSocial IdentitySocial CognitionEmotionCultureFacial Expression RecognitionCross-cultural PerspectiveAffect PerceptionEmotion RecognitionCultural Psychology
North American (Canadian) and Indian observers were shown photographs of six facial emotions; happiness, sadness, fear, anger, surprise, and disgust, expressed by American Caucasian and Indian subjects. Observers were asked to judge each photograph, on a 7‐point scale, for the degree of (a) distinctiveness (free from blending with other emotion categories), (b) pleasantness‐unpleasantness, and (c) arousal‐nonarousal of expressed facial emotion. The results showed significant interaction of Observer × Expressor × Emotion for the distinctiveness judgement. It was found that fearful and angry expressions in Indian faces, in comparison to Caucasian faces, were judged as less distinctly identifiable by observers of both cultural origins. Indian observers rated these two emotion expressions as being more distinctive than did North Americans irrespective of the culture of the expressor. In addition, Indian observers judged fearful and angry expressions as more unpleasant than did North Americans. Caucasians, in comparison to Indians, were judged to have more arousal in most of the emotion expressions.
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