Enhanced embodied response following ambiguous emotional processing

It has generally been assumed that high-level cognitive and emotional processes are based on amodal conceptual information. In contrast, however, “embodied simulation” theory states that the perception of an emotional signal can trigger a simulation of the related state in the motor, somatosensory, and affective systems. To study the effect of social context on the mimicry effect predicted by the “embodied simulation” theory, we recorded the electromyographic (EMG) activity of participants when looking at emotional facial expressions. We observed an increase in embodied responses when the participants were exposed to a context involving social valence before seeing the emotional facial expressions. An examination of the dynamic EMG activity induced by two socially relevant emotional expressions (namely joy and anger) revealed enhanced EMG responses of the facial muscles associated with the related social prime (either positive or negative). These results are discussed within the general framework of embodiment theory.

[1]  U. Dimberg,et al.  Facial reactions to emotional stimuli: Automatically controlled emotional responses , 2002 .

[2]  L. Barsalou Situated simulation in the human conceptual system , 2003 .

[3]  Martial Mermillod,et al.  Emotional Modulation of Attention: Fear Increases but Disgust Reduces the Attentional Blink , 2009, PloS one.

[4]  Paul Pauli,et al.  Modulation of facial mimicry by attitudes , 2008 .

[5]  Gilles Pourtois,et al.  Simultaneous recording of EEG and facial muscle reactions during spontaneous emotional mimicry , 2008, Neuropsychologia.

[6]  U. Dimberg,et al.  Emotional Empathy and Facial Reactions to Facial Expressions , 2011 .

[7]  M. Mermillod,et al.  Unintended embodiment of concepts into percepts: Sensory activation boosts attention for same-modality concepts in the attentional blink paradigm , 2009, Cognition.

[8]  M. Bar,et al.  Top-down predictions in the cognitive brain , 2007, Brain and Cognition.

[9]  A. J. Fridlund,et al.  Guidelines for human electromyographic research. , 1986, Psychophysiology.

[10]  P. Ekman,et al.  Measuring facial movement , 1976 .

[11]  U. Hess,et al.  You smile–I smile: Emotion expression in social interaction , 2010, Biological Psychology.

[12]  M. Mermillod,et al.  Is eye contact the key to the social brain? , 2010, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[13]  Garrison W. Cottrell,et al.  Transmitting and Decoding Facial Expressions , 2005, Psychological science.

[14]  David I Perrett,et al.  Extracting Prototypical Facial Images from Exemplars , 2013, Perception.

[15]  P. Niedenthal Embodying Emotion , 2007, Science.

[16]  Martial Mermillod,et al.  Coarse scales are sufficient for efficient categorization of emotional facial expressions: Evidence from neural computation , 2010, Neurocomputing.