Tracy Jessica L, Robins Richard W
Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, 2136 West Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4.
Emotion. 2008 Feb;8(1):81-95. doi: 10.1037/1528-3542.8.1.81.
Evolutionary accounts of emotion typically assume that humans evolved to quickly and efficiently recognize emotion expressions because these expressions convey fitness-enhancing messages. The present research tested this assumption in 2 studies. Specifically, the authors examined (a) how quickly perceivers could recognize expressions of anger, contempt, disgust, embarrassment, fear, happiness, pride, sadness, shame, and surprise; (b) whether accuracy is improved when perceivers deliberate about each expression's meaning (vs. respond as quickly as possible); and (c) whether accurate recognition can occur under cognitive load. Across both studies, perceivers quickly and efficiently (i.e., under cognitive load) recognized most emotion expressions, including the self-conscious emotions of pride, embarrassment, and shame. Deliberation improved accuracy in some cases, but these improvements were relatively small. Discussion focuses on the implications of these findings for the cognitive processes underlying emotion recognition.
关于情绪的进化理论通常认为,人类进化出能够快速且高效地识别情绪表达的能力,因为这些表达传达了有助于提高适应性的信息。本研究通过两项实验对这一假设进行了验证。具体而言,作者考察了:(a)观察者识别愤怒、轻蔑、厌恶、尴尬、恐惧、快乐、自豪、悲伤、羞耻和惊讶等情绪表达的速度有多快;(b)观察者在思考每种表情的含义时(与尽快做出反应相比),识别准确率是否会提高;(c)在认知负荷下是否能够准确识别情绪。在两项研究中,观察者都能快速且高效地(即在认知负荷下)识别大多数情绪表达,包括自豪、尴尬和羞耻等自我意识情绪。在某些情况下,深思熟虑提高了识别准确率,但这些提高相对较小。讨论聚焦于这些发现对情绪识别背后认知过程的启示。