Publication | Closed Access
Fear-Related Chemosignals Modulate Recognition of Fear in Ambiguous Facial Expressions
196
Citations
28
References
2009
Year
Affective NeurosciencePerceptionPsychologySocial SciencesFearful SweatEmotional ResponseEmotion RegulationAffective ComputingPsychophysicsCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesVisual Emotion PerceptionExperimental PsychologyEmotion RecognitionSocial CognitionEmotion PerceptionFacial Expression RecognitionEmotionAdaptive EmotionAmbiguous Facial Expressions
Integrating emotional cues from different senses is critical for adaptive behavior. Much of the evidence on cross-modal perception of emotions has come from studies of vision and audition. This research has shown that an emotion signaled by one sense modulates how the same emotion is perceived in another sense, especially when the input to the latter sense is ambiguous. We tested whether olfaction causes similar sensory modulation of emotion perception. In two experiments, the chemosignal of fearful sweat biased women toward interpreting ambiguous expressions as more fearful, but had no effect when the facial emotion was more discernible. Our findings provide direct behavioral evidence that social chemosignals can communicate emotions and demonstrate that fear-related chemosignals modulate humans' visual emotion perception in an emotion-specific way--an effect that has been hitherto unsuspected.
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