Publication | Closed Access
When familiarity breeds accuracy: Cultural exposure and facial emotion recognition.
406
Citations
53
References
2003
Year
Social PsychologyAffective NeuroscienceEducationCultural FactorCultural FamiliarityUnited StatesSocial SciencesPsychologyEmotional ResponseAffective ComputingCultural ExposureCross-cultural PsychologyEmotional ExpressionSocial IdentityCognitive ScienceCultural SensitivitySocial CognitionCultureCross-cultural PerspectiveEmotionCultural Psychology
Cultural familiarity influences the recognition of facial emotions. Greater exposure to a culture improves accuracy and speed in identifying that culture’s facial expressions across multiple groups and generations, indicating subtle cultural differences in emotional expression.
Two studies provide evidence for the role of cultural familiarity in recognizing facial expressions of emotion. For Chinese located in China and the United States, Chinese Americans, and non-Asian Americans, accuracy and speed in judging Chinese and American emotions was greater with greater participant exposure to the group posing the expressions. Likewise, Tibetans residing in China and Africans residing in the United States were faster and more accurate when judging emotions expressed by host versus nonhost society members. These effects extended across generations of Chinese Americans, seemingly independent of ethnic or biological ties. Results suggest that the universal affect system governing emotional expression may be characterized by subtle differences in style across cultures, which become more familiar with greater cultural contact.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1