Title of article
Emotional expressions as social signals of rejection and acceptance: Evidence from the Affect Misattribution Paradigm
Author/Authors
Heerdink، نويسنده , , Marc W. and van Kleef، نويسنده , , Gerben A. and Homan، نويسنده , , Astrid C. and Fischer، نويسنده , , Agneta H.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Pages
9
From page
60
To page
68
Abstract
Inclusion in social groups is vital to human survival and wellbeing. We propose that emotional expressions signal acceptance versus rejection to observers. Based on this idea, we hypothesized that happy facial expressions prime acceptance, whereas angry expressions prime rejection. In six experiments using the Affect Misattribution Paradigm (Payne, Cheng, Govorun, & Stewart, 2005), we tested to what extent observers associate facial expressions (angry, happy, sad, fearful, and neutral) with three different operationalizations of acceptance and rejection (accept/reject, warm/cold, close/distant). A meta-analysis on these experiments revealed that angry expressions were more strongly associated with rejection than other (negative) expressions, and that happy expressions were more strongly associated with acceptance than other facial expressions. Effects were stable and robust at presentation times of 50 ms and higher and were similar across conceptualizations of acceptance/rejection. We discuss implications for theorizing on the social functions of emotions and the processing of emotional expressions.
Keywords
emotion , Affect Misattribution Paradigm , social exclusion , facial expression , group process
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2015
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1961733
Link To Document