Title of article
CROSS-CULTURAL EMOTION RECOGNITION AMONG CANADIAN ETHNIC GROUPS
Author/Authors
MARTIN G. BEAUPRE URSULA HESS، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
16
From page
355
To page
370
Abstract
This study aims to investigate cultural differences in recognition accuracy as well as the in-group advantage
hypothesis for emotion recognition among sub-Saharan African, Chinese, and French Canadian individuals
living in Canada. The participants viewed expressions of happiness, anger, sadness, fear, disgust, and shame
selected from the Montreal Set of Facial Displays of Emotion. These data did not support the in-group advantage
hypothesis under the condition of stimulus equivalence. However, both encoder and decoder effects
were found. Specifically, French Canadians were more accurate for the decoding of expressions of shame
and sadness. Moreover, fear expressions were best recognized when shown by sub-Saharan Africans, suggesting
an effect of salience of expressive cues due to morphological features of the face.
Keywords
Facial expression , in-group advantage , Recognition , Emotion , CULTURE , in-group bias
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Record number
708874
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