Women's greater ability to perceive happy facial emotion automatically: gender differences in affective priming.

There is evidence that women are better in recognizing their own and others' emotions. The female advantage in emotion recognition becomes even more apparent under conditions of rapid stimulus presentation. Affective priming paradigms have been developed to examine empirically whether facial em...

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Main Authors: Uta-Susan Donges, Anette Kersting, Thomas Suslow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3402412?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-654f0f44a4ed4b189e3cdc15999081b32020-11-25T00:12:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0177e4174510.1371/journal.pone.0041745Women's greater ability to perceive happy facial emotion automatically: gender differences in affective priming.Uta-Susan DongesAnette KerstingThomas SuslowThere is evidence that women are better in recognizing their own and others' emotions. The female advantage in emotion recognition becomes even more apparent under conditions of rapid stimulus presentation. Affective priming paradigms have been developed to examine empirically whether facial emotion stimuli presented outside of conscious awareness color our impressions. It was observed that masked emotional facial expression has an affect congruent influence on subsequent judgments of neutral stimuli. The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of gender on affective priming based on negative and positive facial expression. In our priming experiment sad, happy, neutral, or no facial expression was briefly presented (for 33 ms) and masked by neutral faces which had to be evaluated. 81 young healthy volunteers (53 women) participated in the study. Subjects had no subjective awareness of emotional primes. Women did not differ from men with regard to age, education, intelligence, trait anxiety, or depressivity. In the whole sample, happy but not sad facial expression elicited valence congruent affective priming. Between-group analyses revealed that women manifested greater affective priming due to happy faces than men. Women seem to have a greater ability to perceive and respond to positive facial emotion at an automatic processing level compared to men. High perceptual sensitivity to minimal social-affective signals may contribute to women's advantage in understanding other persons' emotional states.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3402412?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Uta-Susan Donges
Anette Kersting
Thomas Suslow
spellingShingle Uta-Susan Donges
Anette Kersting
Thomas Suslow
Women's greater ability to perceive happy facial emotion automatically: gender differences in affective priming.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Uta-Susan Donges
Anette Kersting
Thomas Suslow
author_sort Uta-Susan Donges
title Women's greater ability to perceive happy facial emotion automatically: gender differences in affective priming.
title_short Women's greater ability to perceive happy facial emotion automatically: gender differences in affective priming.
title_full Women's greater ability to perceive happy facial emotion automatically: gender differences in affective priming.
title_fullStr Women's greater ability to perceive happy facial emotion automatically: gender differences in affective priming.
title_full_unstemmed Women's greater ability to perceive happy facial emotion automatically: gender differences in affective priming.
title_sort women's greater ability to perceive happy facial emotion automatically: gender differences in affective priming.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description There is evidence that women are better in recognizing their own and others' emotions. The female advantage in emotion recognition becomes even more apparent under conditions of rapid stimulus presentation. Affective priming paradigms have been developed to examine empirically whether facial emotion stimuli presented outside of conscious awareness color our impressions. It was observed that masked emotional facial expression has an affect congruent influence on subsequent judgments of neutral stimuli. The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of gender on affective priming based on negative and positive facial expression. In our priming experiment sad, happy, neutral, or no facial expression was briefly presented (for 33 ms) and masked by neutral faces which had to be evaluated. 81 young healthy volunteers (53 women) participated in the study. Subjects had no subjective awareness of emotional primes. Women did not differ from men with regard to age, education, intelligence, trait anxiety, or depressivity. In the whole sample, happy but not sad facial expression elicited valence congruent affective priming. Between-group analyses revealed that women manifested greater affective priming due to happy faces than men. Women seem to have a greater ability to perceive and respond to positive facial emotion at an automatic processing level compared to men. High perceptual sensitivity to minimal social-affective signals may contribute to women's advantage in understanding other persons' emotional states.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3402412?pdf=render
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