Publication | Closed Access
Psychophysiological and subjective indices of emotion as a function of age and gender
52
Citations
52
References
2006
Year
Affective VariablePictorial StimuliAffective NeurosciencePsychologySocial SciencesEmotional ResponseGender IdentityEmotion RegulationPsychophysiologyGender StudiesAffective ComputingSubjective IndicesHeart RateBehavioral SciencesArousal DimensionsAdaptive EmotionSexual BehaviorSocial CognitionEmotionEmotion Recognition
Old, middle-aged and young persons of both genders were presented with slides containing pictorial stimuli that varied in emotional content. Each picture was rated on three dimensions: (1) valence; (2) arousal; and (3) dominance, using a 25-point scale. Heart rate, skin conductance, and forehead and cheek EMG were recorded during each slide presentation. The old and middle-aged groups showed greatly attenuated psychophysiological responses, compared to the young group. However, the old and middle-aged subjects used more extreme ratings than the young subjects on both the valence and arousal dimensions. Females were more valence-sensitive than males, but males in general used more extreme ratings of arousal than females. These results suggest a tendency to report increased felt emotion but decreased physiological response to emotional stimuli across the life span.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1