Laughing at funerals and frowning at weddings: Top-down influences of context-driven social judgments on emotional mimicry

This research aimed to assess top-down effects of social judgments on (facial) emotional mimicry. Based on the mimicry as social regulator model (Hess & Fischer, 2013) and the notion that people can use emotion expressions as cues to an expresser's traits (Hareli & Hess, 2010),...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Till Kastendieck, Heidi Mauersberger, Christophe Blaison, Jasmin Ghalib, Ursula Hess
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Acta Psychologica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691820305199
id doaj-d8595d9ff1214a5a9d23c54a646d4467
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d8595d9ff1214a5a9d23c54a646d44672021-03-18T04:30:35ZengElsevierActa Psychologica0001-69182021-01-01212103195Laughing at funerals and frowning at weddings: Top-down influences of context-driven social judgments on emotional mimicryTill Kastendieck0Heidi Mauersberger1Christophe Blaison2Jasmin Ghalib3Ursula Hess4Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany; Corresponding author at: Department of Psychology, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Rudower Chaussee 18, 12489 Berlin, Germany.Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, GermanyUniversité de Paris, FranceHumboldt-Universität zu Berlin, GermanyHumboldt-Universität zu Berlin, GermanyThis research aimed to assess top-down effects of social judgments on (facial) emotional mimicry. Based on the mimicry as social regulator model (Hess & Fischer, 2013) and the notion that people can use emotion expressions as cues to an expresser's traits (Hareli & Hess, 2010), we predicted that participants judge expressers who show affectively deviant expressions more negatively, feel less close to them and, thus, show reduced mimicry. Participants saw smiles and sad expressions embedded in either a wedding or funeral scene (or neutral control). In Study 1, affectively deviant expressions were rated as inappropriate and led to less self-reported interpersonal closeness to the expresser.In Study 2, both happiness and sadness mimicry were affected by the normativeness of the expression. However, the specific effect varied. Participants mimicked both deviant and normative happy expressions only when they felt close to the expresser. However, in the case of deviant expressions, closeness was lower. When participants did not feel close to the expresser, their expression was neutral, that is, they did not mimic. Sadness was only mimicked when appropriate to the context, that is, when deemed a legitimate response and a valid appeal for help, regardless of closeness. In this sense, facial mimicry of sadness expression can be considered an empathic reaction. In sum, the present research shows strong evidence for a top-down effect of social judgments on mimicry. It further suggests that this effect differed as a function of emotion expression and the meaning and social appeal conveyed by that expression.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691820305199Top-down modulationEmotional mimicryFacial mimicrySocial judgmentInterpersonal closeness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Till Kastendieck
Heidi Mauersberger
Christophe Blaison
Jasmin Ghalib
Ursula Hess
spellingShingle Till Kastendieck
Heidi Mauersberger
Christophe Blaison
Jasmin Ghalib
Ursula Hess
Laughing at funerals and frowning at weddings: Top-down influences of context-driven social judgments on emotional mimicry
Acta Psychologica
Top-down modulation
Emotional mimicry
Facial mimicry
Social judgment
Interpersonal closeness
author_facet Till Kastendieck
Heidi Mauersberger
Christophe Blaison
Jasmin Ghalib
Ursula Hess
author_sort Till Kastendieck
title Laughing at funerals and frowning at weddings: Top-down influences of context-driven social judgments on emotional mimicry
title_short Laughing at funerals and frowning at weddings: Top-down influences of context-driven social judgments on emotional mimicry
title_full Laughing at funerals and frowning at weddings: Top-down influences of context-driven social judgments on emotional mimicry
title_fullStr Laughing at funerals and frowning at weddings: Top-down influences of context-driven social judgments on emotional mimicry
title_full_unstemmed Laughing at funerals and frowning at weddings: Top-down influences of context-driven social judgments on emotional mimicry
title_sort laughing at funerals and frowning at weddings: top-down influences of context-driven social judgments on emotional mimicry
publisher Elsevier
series Acta Psychologica
issn 0001-6918
publishDate 2021-01-01
description This research aimed to assess top-down effects of social judgments on (facial) emotional mimicry. Based on the mimicry as social regulator model (Hess & Fischer, 2013) and the notion that people can use emotion expressions as cues to an expresser's traits (Hareli & Hess, 2010), we predicted that participants judge expressers who show affectively deviant expressions more negatively, feel less close to them and, thus, show reduced mimicry. Participants saw smiles and sad expressions embedded in either a wedding or funeral scene (or neutral control). In Study 1, affectively deviant expressions were rated as inappropriate and led to less self-reported interpersonal closeness to the expresser.In Study 2, both happiness and sadness mimicry were affected by the normativeness of the expression. However, the specific effect varied. Participants mimicked both deviant and normative happy expressions only when they felt close to the expresser. However, in the case of deviant expressions, closeness was lower. When participants did not feel close to the expresser, their expression was neutral, that is, they did not mimic. Sadness was only mimicked when appropriate to the context, that is, when deemed a legitimate response and a valid appeal for help, regardless of closeness. In this sense, facial mimicry of sadness expression can be considered an empathic reaction. In sum, the present research shows strong evidence for a top-down effect of social judgments on mimicry. It further suggests that this effect differed as a function of emotion expression and the meaning and social appeal conveyed by that expression.
topic Top-down modulation
Emotional mimicry
Facial mimicry
Social judgment
Interpersonal closeness
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691820305199
work_keys_str_mv AT tillkastendieck laughingatfuneralsandfrowningatweddingstopdowninfluencesofcontextdrivensocialjudgmentsonemotionalmimicry
AT heidimauersberger laughingatfuneralsandfrowningatweddingstopdowninfluencesofcontextdrivensocialjudgmentsonemotionalmimicry
AT christopheblaison laughingatfuneralsandfrowningatweddingstopdowninfluencesofcontextdrivensocialjudgmentsonemotionalmimicry
AT jasminghalib laughingatfuneralsandfrowningatweddingstopdowninfluencesofcontextdrivensocialjudgmentsonemotionalmimicry
AT ursulahess laughingatfuneralsandfrowningatweddingstopdowninfluencesofcontextdrivensocialjudgmentsonemotionalmimicry
_version_ 1724217782039478272