Publication | Closed Access
The Effects of Fear and Anger Facial Expressions on Approach- and Avoidance-Related Behaviors.
570
Citations
38
References
2005
Year
Anger Facial ExpressionsAffective VariableFear AppealsAffective NeurosciencePsychologySocial SciencesEmotional ResponseUniversal Social SignalsEmotion RegulationAffective ComputingFear ExpressionBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceAdaptive EmotionAggressionSocial CognitionAvoidance-related BehaviorsSocial BehaviorEmotionAnger ExpressionEmotion Recognition
Facial expressions of fear and anger are universal social signals that are often interpreted as threats and used in studies of threat responses. The study found that anger expression promotes avoidance behavior, while fear expression promotes approach behavior, challenging the view that fear is primarily threatening.
The facial expressions of fear and anger are universal social signals in humans. Both expressions have been frequently presumed to signify threat to perceivers and therefore are often used in studies investigating responses to threatening stimuli. Here the authors show that the anger expression facilitates avoidance-related behavior in participants, which supports the notion of this expression being a threatening stimulus. The fear expression, on the other hand, facilitates approach behaviors in perceivers. This contradicts the notion of the fear expression as predominantly threatening or aversive and suggests it may represent an affiliative stimulus. Although the fear expression may signal that a threat is present in the environment, the effect of the expression on conspecifics may be in part to elicit approach.
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