Centro studi e ricerche in Neuroscienze Cognitive, Dipartimento di Psicologia, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, Campus di Cesena, Cesena, Italy.
IRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia, Rome, Italy.
PLoS One. 2020 Feb 20;15(2):e0229364. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0229364. eCollection 2020.
Facial mimicry is commonly defined as the tendency to imitate-at a sub-threshold level-facial expressions of other individuals. Numerous studies support a role of facial mimicry in recognizing others' emotions. However, the underlying functional mechanism is unclear. A prominent hypothesis considers facial mimicry as based on an action-perception loop, leading to the prediction that facial mimicry should be observed only when processing others' facial expressions. Nevertheless, previous studies have also detected facial mimicry during observation of emotional bodily expressions. An emergent alternative hypothesis is that facial mimicry overtly reflects the simulation of an "emotion", rather than the reproduction of a specific observed motor pattern. In the present study, we tested whether blocking mimicry ("Bite") on the lower face disrupted recognition of happy expressions conveyed by either facial or body expressions. In Experiment 1, we tested participants' ability to identify happy, fearful and neutral expressions in the Bite condition and in two control conditions. In Experiment 2, to ensure that such a manipulation selectively affects emotion recognition, we tested participants' ability to recognize emotional expressions, as well as the actors' gender, under the Bite condition and a control condition. Finally, we investigated the relationship between dispositional empathy and emotion recognition under the condition of blocked mimicry. Our findings demonstrated that blocking mimicry on the lower face hindered recognition of happy facial and body expressions, while the recognition of neutral and fearful expressions was not affected by the mimicry manipulation. The mimicry manipulation did not affect the gender discrimination task. Furthermore, the impairment of happy expression recognition correlated with empathic traits. These results support the role of facial mimicry in emotion recognition and suggest that facial mimicry reflects a global sensorimotor simulation of others' emotions rather than a muscle-specific reproduction of an observed motor expression.
面部模仿通常被定义为在亚阈值水平上模仿他人面部表情的倾向。许多研究支持面部模仿在识别他人情绪中的作用。然而,其潜在的功能机制尚不清楚。一个突出的假设认为面部模仿是基于一种动作感知循环,从而预测只有在处理他人的面部表情时才会观察到面部模仿。然而,先前的研究也在观察情绪身体表达时检测到了面部模仿。一个新兴的替代假设是,面部模仿明显反映了对“情绪”的模拟,而不是对特定观察到的运动模式的再现。在本研究中,我们测试了在下半脸阻断模仿(“Bite”)是否会干扰通过面部或身体表情传达的快乐表情的识别。在实验 1 中,我们测试了参与者在“Bite”条件和两个对照条件下识别快乐、恐惧和中性表情的能力。在实验 2 中,为了确保这种操作选择性地影响情绪识别,我们测试了参与者在“Bite”条件和对照条件下识别情绪表情以及演员性别的能力。最后,我们调查了在阻断模仿条件下的性格同理心与情绪识别之间的关系。我们的研究结果表明,在下半脸阻断模仿会阻碍对快乐面部和身体表情的识别,而对中性和恐惧表情的识别不受模仿操作的影响。模仿操作不影响性别识别任务。此外,快乐表情识别障碍与同理心特质相关。这些结果支持面部模仿在情绪识别中的作用,并表明面部模仿反映了对他人情绪的全局感觉运动模拟,而不是对观察到的运动表达的肌肉特异性再现。