Department of Psychology, Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, University of Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany.
Department of Psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany.
Behav Brain Res. 2024 Aug 5;471:115126. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2024.115126. Epub 2024 Jun 29.
In face-to-face social interactions, emotional expressions provide insights into the mental state of an interactive partner. This information can be crucial to infer action intentions and react towards another person's actions. Here we investigate how facial emotional expressions impact subjective experience and physiological and behavioral responses to social actions during real-time interactions. Thirty-two participants interacted with virtual agents while fully immersed in Virtual Reality. Agents displayed an angry or happy facial expression before they directed an appetitive (fist bump) or aversive (punch) social action towards the participant. Participants responded to these actions, either by reciprocating the fist bump or by defending the punch. For all interactions, subjective experience was measured using ratings. In addition, physiological responses (electrodermal activity, electrocardiogram) and participants' response times were recorded. Aversive actions were judged to be more arousing and less pleasant relative to appetitive actions. In addition, angry expressions increased heart rate relative to happy expressions. Crucially, interaction effects between facial emotional expression and action were observed. Angry expressions reduced pleasantness stronger for appetitive compared to aversive actions. Furthermore, skin conductance responses to aversive actions were increased for happy compared to angry expressions and reaction times were faster to aversive compared to appetitive actions when agents showed an angry expression. These results indicate that observers used facial emotional expression to generate expectations for particular actions. Consequently, the present study demonstrates that observers integrate information from facial emotional expressions with actions during social interactions.
在面对面的社交互动中,情感表达提供了对互动伙伴心理状态的洞察。这些信息对于推断行为意图和对他人的行为做出反应至关重要。在这里,我们研究了面部情感表达如何在实时互动中影响主观体验以及对社会行为的生理和行为反应。32 名参与者在完全沉浸于虚拟现实的情况下与虚拟代理进行互动。代理在向参与者发出有吸引力(击拳)或厌恶(拳击)的社交动作之前,先展示出愤怒或高兴的面部表情。参与者对这些动作做出反应,要么回应击拳,要么防御拳击。对于所有的互动,都使用评分来衡量主观体验。此外,还记录了生理反应(皮肤电活动、心电图)和参与者的反应时间。与有吸引力的动作相比,厌恶的动作被判断为更令人兴奋且不太愉快。此外,与高兴的表情相比,愤怒的表情会增加心率。至关重要的是,观察到了面部情感表达和动作之间的交互作用。与有吸引力的动作相比,愤怒的表情会使愉悦感降低得更强。此外,与愤怒的表情相比,当代理表现出高兴的表情时,对厌恶的动作的皮肤电反应增加,而对厌恶的动作的反应时间比有吸引力的动作更快。这些结果表明,观察者使用面部情感表达来生成对特定动作的期望。因此,本研究表明,观察者在社交互动中会将面部情感表达的信息与动作结合起来。