Superior recognition performance for happy masked and unmasked faces in both younger and older adults.

In the aging literature it has been shown that even though emotion recognition performance decreases with age, the decrease is less for happiness than other facial expressions. Studies in younger adults have also revealed that happy faces are more strongly attended to and better recognized than othe...

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Main Authors: Joakim eSvard, Stefan eWiens, Hakan eFischer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00520/full
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spelling doaj-45aacf1a87ec415a8a6eabc828f6c66e2020-11-24T22:01:59ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782012-11-01310.3389/fpsyg.2012.0052033005Superior recognition performance for happy masked and unmasked faces in both younger and older adults.Joakim eSvard0Stefan eWiens1Hakan eFischer2Hakan eFischer3Aging Research Center, Karolinska InstituteStockholm UniversityAging Research Center, Karolinska InstituteStockholm UniversityIn the aging literature it has been shown that even though emotion recognition performance decreases with age, the decrease is less for happiness than other facial expressions. Studies in younger adults have also revealed that happy faces are more strongly attended to and better recognized than other emotional facial expressions. Thus, there might be a more age independent happy face advantage in facial expression recognition. By using a backward masking paradigm and varying stimulus onset asynchronies (17–267 ms) the temporal development of a happy face advantage, on a continuum from low to high levels of visibility, was examined in younger and older adults. Results showed that across age groups, recognition performance for happy faces was better than for neutral and fearful faces at durations longer than 50 ms. Importantly, the results showed a happy face advantage already during early processing of emotional faces in both younger and older adults. This advantage is discussed in terms of processing of salient perceptual features and elaborative processing of the happy face. We also investigate the combined effect of age and neuroticism on emotional face processing. The rationale was previous findings of age related differences in physiological arousal to emotional pictures and a relation between arousal and neuroticism. Across all durations, there was an interaction between age and neuroticism, showing that being high in neuroticism might be disadvantageous for younger, but not older adults’ emotion recognition performance during arousal enhancing tasks. These results indicate that there is a relation between aging, neuroticism, and performance, potentially related to physiological arousal.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00520/fullAgingemotionfacesTop-DownBottom-upfearful faces
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joakim eSvard
Stefan eWiens
Hakan eFischer
Hakan eFischer
spellingShingle Joakim eSvard
Stefan eWiens
Hakan eFischer
Hakan eFischer
Superior recognition performance for happy masked and unmasked faces in both younger and older adults.
Frontiers in Psychology
Aging
emotion
faces
Top-Down
Bottom-up
fearful faces
author_facet Joakim eSvard
Stefan eWiens
Hakan eFischer
Hakan eFischer
author_sort Joakim eSvard
title Superior recognition performance for happy masked and unmasked faces in both younger and older adults.
title_short Superior recognition performance for happy masked and unmasked faces in both younger and older adults.
title_full Superior recognition performance for happy masked and unmasked faces in both younger and older adults.
title_fullStr Superior recognition performance for happy masked and unmasked faces in both younger and older adults.
title_full_unstemmed Superior recognition performance for happy masked and unmasked faces in both younger and older adults.
title_sort superior recognition performance for happy masked and unmasked faces in both younger and older adults.
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2012-11-01
description In the aging literature it has been shown that even though emotion recognition performance decreases with age, the decrease is less for happiness than other facial expressions. Studies in younger adults have also revealed that happy faces are more strongly attended to and better recognized than other emotional facial expressions. Thus, there might be a more age independent happy face advantage in facial expression recognition. By using a backward masking paradigm and varying stimulus onset asynchronies (17–267 ms) the temporal development of a happy face advantage, on a continuum from low to high levels of visibility, was examined in younger and older adults. Results showed that across age groups, recognition performance for happy faces was better than for neutral and fearful faces at durations longer than 50 ms. Importantly, the results showed a happy face advantage already during early processing of emotional faces in both younger and older adults. This advantage is discussed in terms of processing of salient perceptual features and elaborative processing of the happy face. We also investigate the combined effect of age and neuroticism on emotional face processing. The rationale was previous findings of age related differences in physiological arousal to emotional pictures and a relation between arousal and neuroticism. Across all durations, there was an interaction between age and neuroticism, showing that being high in neuroticism might be disadvantageous for younger, but not older adults’ emotion recognition performance during arousal enhancing tasks. These results indicate that there is a relation between aging, neuroticism, and performance, potentially related to physiological arousal.
topic Aging
emotion
faces
Top-Down
Bottom-up
fearful faces
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00520/full
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