Cultural differences in affect intensity perception in the context of advertising

Cultural differences in the perception of positive affect intensity within an advertising context were investigated among American, Japanese and Russian participants. Participants were asked to rate the intensity of facial expressions of positive emotions, which displayed either subtle, low intensit...

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Main Authors: Marianna ePogosyan, Jan B Engelmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2011-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
USA
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00313/full
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spelling doaj-1698484da2784641924fac26248d2a8d2020-11-24T22:53:39ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782011-11-01210.3389/fpsyg.2011.0031313807Cultural differences in affect intensity perception in the context of advertisingMarianna ePogosyan0Jan B Engelmann1International Christian UniversityUniversity of ZurichCultural differences in the perception of positive affect intensity within an advertising context were investigated among American, Japanese and Russian participants. Participants were asked to rate the intensity of facial expressions of positive emotions, which displayed either subtle, low intensity or salient, high intensity expressions of positive affect. In agreement with previous findings from cross-cultural psychological research, current results demonstrate both cross-cultural agreement and differences in the perception of positive affect intensity across the three cultures. Specifically, American participants perceived high arousal images as significantly less calm than participants from the other two cultures, while the Japanese participants perceived low arousal images as significantly more excited than participants from the other cultures. The underlying mechanisms of these cultural differences were further investigated through difference scores that probed for cultural differences in perception and categorization of positive emotions. Findings indicate that rating differences are due to (1) perceptual differences in the extent to which high arousal images were discriminated from low arousal images, and (2) categorization differences in the extent to which facial expressions were grouped into affect intensity categories. Specifically, American participants revealed significantly higher perceptual differentiation between arousal levels of facial expressions in high and intermediate intensity categories. Japanese participants, on the other hand, did not discriminate between high and low arousal affect categories to the same extent as did the American and Russian participants. These findings indicate the presence of cultural differences in underlying decoding mechanisms of facial expressions of positive affect intensity. Implications of these results for cross-cultural communication and global advertising are discussed.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00313/fullJapanRussiaEmotion Perceptionpositive affectcultureUSA
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marianna ePogosyan
Jan B Engelmann
spellingShingle Marianna ePogosyan
Jan B Engelmann
Cultural differences in affect intensity perception in the context of advertising
Frontiers in Psychology
Japan
Russia
Emotion Perception
positive affect
culture
USA
author_facet Marianna ePogosyan
Jan B Engelmann
author_sort Marianna ePogosyan
title Cultural differences in affect intensity perception in the context of advertising
title_short Cultural differences in affect intensity perception in the context of advertising
title_full Cultural differences in affect intensity perception in the context of advertising
title_fullStr Cultural differences in affect intensity perception in the context of advertising
title_full_unstemmed Cultural differences in affect intensity perception in the context of advertising
title_sort cultural differences in affect intensity perception in the context of advertising
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2011-11-01
description Cultural differences in the perception of positive affect intensity within an advertising context were investigated among American, Japanese and Russian participants. Participants were asked to rate the intensity of facial expressions of positive emotions, which displayed either subtle, low intensity or salient, high intensity expressions of positive affect. In agreement with previous findings from cross-cultural psychological research, current results demonstrate both cross-cultural agreement and differences in the perception of positive affect intensity across the three cultures. Specifically, American participants perceived high arousal images as significantly less calm than participants from the other two cultures, while the Japanese participants perceived low arousal images as significantly more excited than participants from the other cultures. The underlying mechanisms of these cultural differences were further investigated through difference scores that probed for cultural differences in perception and categorization of positive emotions. Findings indicate that rating differences are due to (1) perceptual differences in the extent to which high arousal images were discriminated from low arousal images, and (2) categorization differences in the extent to which facial expressions were grouped into affect intensity categories. Specifically, American participants revealed significantly higher perceptual differentiation between arousal levels of facial expressions in high and intermediate intensity categories. Japanese participants, on the other hand, did not discriminate between high and low arousal affect categories to the same extent as did the American and Russian participants. These findings indicate the presence of cultural differences in underlying decoding mechanisms of facial expressions of positive affect intensity. Implications of these results for cross-cultural communication and global advertising are discussed.
topic Japan
Russia
Emotion Perception
positive affect
culture
USA
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00313/full
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