What emotional reactions can tell us about the nature of others: An appraisal perspective on person perception

The present research aimed to assess how people use knowledge about the emotional reactions of others to make inferences about their character. Specifically, we postulate that people can reconstruct or “reverse engineer” the appraisals underlying an emotional reaction and use this appraisal information to draw person perception inferences. As predicted, a person who reacted with anger to blame was perceived as more aggressive, and self-confident, but also as less warm and gentle than a person who reacted with sadness (Study 1). A person who reacted with a smile (Study 1) or remained neutral (Study 2) was perceived as self-confident but also as unemotional. These perceptions were mediated by perceived appraisals.

[1]  B. Knutson Facial expressions of emotion influence interpersonal trait inferences , 1996 .

[2]  Ira J. Roseman Appraisal determinants of discrete emotions. , 1991 .

[3]  B. Rimé The Social Sharing of Emotion as a Source for the Social Knowledge of Emotion , 1995 .

[4]  Kristi M. Lewis When leaders display emotion: how followers respond to negative emotional expression of male and female leaders , 2000 .

[5]  Nicole Powell,et al.  Anger and Aggression , 2010 .

[6]  A. Vingerhoets,et al.  Social messages of crying faces: Their influence on anticipated person perception, emotions and behavioural responses , 2006 .

[7]  Aristotle,et al.  THE NICOMACHEAN ETHICS , 1990 .

[8]  D. J. Schneider,et al.  Implicit personality theory: A review. , 1973 .

[9]  D. A. Kenny,et al.  PERSON: A General Model of Interpersonal Perception , 2004, Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

[10]  J. Uleman Consciousness and Control , 1987 .

[11]  B. Parkinson Putting appraisal in context , 2001 .

[12]  Craig A. Smith,et al.  Patterns of cognitive appraisal in emotion. , 1985, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[13]  H. Markus,et al.  Emotion and culture: Empirical studies of mutual influence. , 1994 .

[14]  B. Parkinson Relations and dissociations between appraisal and emotion ratings of reasonable and unreasonable anger and guilt , 1999 .

[15]  N. Ambady,et al.  On judging and being judged accurately in zero-acquaintance situations. , 1995 .

[16]  U. Hess,et al.  The Influence of Facial Emotion Displays, Gender, and Ethnicity on Judgments of Dominance and Affiliation , 2000 .

[17]  Y. Trope Identification and Inferential Processes in Dispositional Attribution. , 1986 .

[18]  K. Scherer,et al.  Appraisal processes in emotion. , 2003 .

[19]  Leslie A. Zebrowitz,et al.  Trait Impressions as Overgeneralized Responses to Adaptively Significant Facial Qualities: Evidence from Connectionist Modeling , 2003, Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

[20]  Alexander Todorov,et al.  The efficiency of binding spontaneous trait inferences to actors’ faces , 2003 .

[21]  D. A. Kenny,et al.  The moderator-mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations. , 1986, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[22]  J. Stainer,et al.  The Emotions , 1922, Nature.

[23]  L. Tiedens,et al.  Anger and advancement versus sadness and subjugation: the effect of negative emotion expressions on social status conferral. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[24]  A. Eagly Sex differences in social behavior : a social-role interpretation , 1987 .

[25]  B. Parkinson Everyday conceptions of emotion: An introduction to the psychology, anthropology, and linguistics of emotion , 1998 .

[26]  L. Wheeler,et al.  Review of personality and social psychology , 1980 .

[27]  James A. Russell,et al.  Everyday Conceptions of Emotion , 1995 .

[28]  U. Hess,et al.  The role of causal attribution in hurt feelings and related social emotions elicited in reaction to other's feedback about failure , 2008 .

[29]  K. Scherer Toward a dynamic theory of emotion : The component process model of affective states , 1987 .

[30]  Kristopher J Preacher,et al.  Asymptotic and resampling strategies for assessing and comparing indirect effects in multiple mediator models , 2008, Behavior research methods.

[31]  T. Dalgleish,et al.  Handbook of cognition and emotion , 1999 .

[32]  Matthew E. Ansfield,et al.  Smiling When Distressed: When a Smile Is a Frown Turned Upside Down , 2007, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[33]  K. Scherer Emotion as a multicomponent process: A model and some cross-cultural data. , 1984 .

[34]  Alexander Todorov,et al.  Spontaneous trait inferences are bound to actors' faces: evidence from a false recognition paradigm. , 2002, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[35]  Andrew Ortony,et al.  The Cognitive Structure of Emotions , 1988 .

[36]  N. Ambady,et al.  Thin slices of expressive behavior as predictors of interpersonal consequences: A meta-analysis. , 1992 .

[37]  Phoebe C. Ellsworth,et al.  Sense, culture, and sensibility. , 1994 .

[38]  P. Ekman,et al.  The Duchenne smile: emotional expression and brain physiology. II. , 1990, Journal of personality and social psychology.