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1.
Emotion ; 10(6): 874-93, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21171759

ABSTRACT

Facial expressions are crucial to human social communication, but the extent to which they are innate and universal versus learned and culture dependent is a subject of debate. Two studies explored the effect of culture and learning on facial expression understanding. In Experiment 1, Japanese and U.S. participants interpreted facial expressions of emotion. Each group was better than the other at classifying facial expressions posed by members of the same culture. In Experiment 2, this reciprocal in-group advantage was reproduced by a neurocomputational model trained in either a Japanese cultural context or an American cultural context. The model demonstrates how each of us, interacting with others in a particular cultural context, learns to recognize a culture-specific facial expression dialect.


Subject(s)
Cultural Characteristics , Facial Expression , Recognition, Psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Japan , Male , United States , Young Adult
2.
Perception ; 33(2): 135-45, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15109157

ABSTRACT

We conducted two experiments to investigate the psychological factors affecting the attractiveness of composite faces. Feminised or juvenilised Japanese faces were created by morphing between average male and female adult faces or between average male (female) adult and boy (girl) faces. In experiment 1, we asked the participants to rank the attractiveness of these faces. The results showed moderately juvenilised faces to be highly attractive. In experiment 2, we analysed the impressions the participants had of the composite faces by the semantic-differential method and determined the factors that largely affected attractiveness. On the basis of the factor scores, we plotted the faces in factor spaces and analysed the locations of attractive faces. We found that most of the attractive juvenilised faces involved impressions corresponding to an augmentation of femininity, characterised by the factors of 'elegance', 'mildness', and 'youthfulness', which the attractive faces potentially had.


Subject(s)
Beauty , Face , Adult , Age Factors , Child , Female , Humans , Judgment , Male , Personality , Psychological Tests , Regression Analysis , Sex Factors
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