How Mood States Affect Information Processing During Facial Emotion Recognition: An Eye Tracking Study

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_98DC7E42B11C
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
How Mood States Affect Information Processing During Facial Emotion Recognition: An Eye Tracking Study
Journal
Swiss Journal of Psychology
Author(s)
Schmid P.C., Schmid Mast M., Bombari D., Mast F.W., Lobmaier J.S.
ISSN
1421-0185
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/2011
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
70
Number
4
Pages
223-231
Language
english
Notes
Special Issue: Social Cues in Faces
Abstract
Existing research shows that a sad mood hinders emotion recognition. More generally, it has been shown that mood affects information processing. A happy mood facilitates global processing and a sad mood boosts local processing. Global processing has been described as the Gestalt-like integration of details; local processing is understood as the detailed processing of the parts. The present study investigated how mood affects the use of information processing styles in an emotion recognition task. Thirty-three participants were primed with happy or sad moods in a within-subjects design. They performed an emotion recognition task during which eye movements were registered. Eye movements served to provide information about participants' global or local information processing style. Our results suggest that when participants were in a happy mood, they processed information more globally compared to when they were in a sad mood. However, global processing was only positively and local processing only negatively related to emotion recognition when participants were in a sad mood. When they were in a happy mood, processing style was not related to emotion recognition performance. Our findings clarify the mechanism that underlies accurate emotion recognition, which is important when one is aiming to improve this ability (i.e., via training)
Keywords
Emotion recognition, Information processing, Mood, Gender
Web of science
Create date
09/10/2014 15:23
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:00
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