Levitan Carmel A, Rusk Isabelle, Jonas-Delson Danielle, Lou Hanyun, Kuzniar Lennon, Davidson Gray, Sherman Aleksandra
Occidental College, 1600 Campus Road, Los Angeles, California, 90041, United States.
Iperception. 2022 Jun 26;13(3):20416695221107391. doi: 10.1177/20416695221107391. eCollection 2022 May.
To reduce the spread of COVID-19, mask wearing has become ubiquitous in much of the world. We studied the extent to which masks impair emotion recognition and dampen the perceived intensity of facial expressions by naturalistically inducing positive, neutral, and negative emotions in individuals while they were masked and unmasked. Two groups of online participants rated the emotional intensity of each presented image. One group rated full faces (N=104); the other (N=102) rated cropped images where only the upper face was visible. We found that masks impaired the recognition of and rated intensity of positive emotions. This happened even when the faces were cropped and the lower part of the face was not visible. Masks may thus reduce positive emotion and/or expressivity of positive emotion. However, perception of negativity was unaffected by masking, perhaps because unlike positive emotions like happiness which are signaled more in the mouth, negative emotions like anger rely more on the upper face.
为减少新冠病毒的传播,戴口罩在世界上许多地方已变得十分普遍。我们通过在个体戴口罩和不戴口罩时自然诱发积极、中性和消极情绪,研究了口罩在多大程度上会损害情绪识别并减弱面部表情的感知强度。两组在线参与者对每张呈现的图像的情绪强度进行评分。一组对全脸(N = 104)进行评分;另一组(N = 102)对仅露出上半脸的裁剪图像进行评分。我们发现口罩会损害对积极情绪的识别和评分强度。即使面部被裁剪且脸部下半部分不可见时也是如此。因此,口罩可能会减少积极情绪和/或积极情绪的表现力。然而,对消极情绪的感知不受戴口罩的影响,这可能是因为与像幸福这样更多通过嘴巴传达的积极情绪不同,像愤怒这样的消极情绪更多依赖于上半脸。