Department of Language and Literature, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt, Germany.
School of Psychology, University of Kent, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 2021 Jan;212:103215. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2020.103215. Epub 2020 Dec 11.
We explore dance video clip stimuli as a means to test human observers' accuracy in detecting genuine emotional expressivity in full-body movements. Stimuli of every-day-type full-body expressions of emotions usually use culturally very recognizable actions (e.g. fist shaking for anger, etc). However, expressive dance movement stimuli can be created to contain fully abstract movements. The expressivity results from subtle variations in the body movements of the expressor, and emotions cannot be recognised by observers via particular actions (e.g. fist shaking, etc). Forty-one participants watched and rated 24 pairs of short dance videos -from a published normalised dance stimuli library- in randomised order (N = 48). Of each carefully matched pair, one version of the full-body movement sequence had been danced to be emotionally genuinely expressive (clip a), while the other version of the same sequence (clip b) had been danced -while technically correct- without any emotional expressivity. Participants rated (i) expressivity (to test their accuracy; block 1), and (ii) how much they liked each movement (an implicit measure to test their emotional response ("liking"); block 2). Participants rated clips that were intended to be expressive as more expressive (part 1: expressivity ratings), and liked those expressive clips more than the non-expressive clips (part 2: liking ratings). Besides, their galvanic skin response differed, depending on the category of clips they were watching (expressive vs. non-expressive), and this relationship was modulated by interceptive accuracy and arts experience. Results are discussed in relation to the Body Precision Hypothesis and the Hypothesis of Constructed Emotion.
我们探索舞蹈视频片段作为一种手段,以测试人类观察者在检测全身运动中真实情感表达的准确性。通常,用于日常类型的情感全身体表情的刺激物使用文化上非常可识别的动作(例如生气时的握拳等)。然而,可以创建表达性舞蹈运动刺激物来包含完全抽象的动作。表现力源自表达者的身体动作的细微变化,观察者无法通过特定动作(例如握拳等)识别情感。41 名参与者观看并随机顺序(N=48)对 24 对短舞蹈视频进行评分-来自已发布的标准化舞蹈刺激物库。在每一对精心匹配的视频中,一个版本的全身运动序列是情感上真正有表现力的(剪辑 a),而同一序列的另一个版本(剪辑 b)是在没有任何情感表现力的情况下以技术上正确的方式跳舞的。参与者(i)评定表现力(以测试他们的准确性;第 1 组),以及(ii)他们对每个动作的喜欢程度(一种测试他们情感反应的内隐测量(“喜欢”);第 2 组)。参与者对旨在有表现力的剪辑进行了更高的评价(第 1 部分:表现力评分),并且比非表现力剪辑更喜欢那些有表现力的剪辑(第 2 部分:喜欢评分)。此外,他们的皮肤电反应因他们正在观看的剪辑类别而异(有表现力的与非有表现力的),这种关系受到拦截准确性和艺术经验的调节。结果与身体精度假设和构建情感假设有关。