Effects of face masks on the appearance of emotional expressions and invariant characteristics

W. K. Lau, A. Huckauf
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Abstract Faces convey a lot of information about a person. However, the usage of face masks occludes important parts of the face. There is already information that face masks alter the processing of variable characteristics such as emotional expressions and the identity of a person. To investigate whether masks influenced the processing of facial information, we compared ratings of full faces and those covered by face masks. 196 participants completed one of two parallel versions of the experiment. The data demonstrated varying effects of face masks on various characteristics. First, we showed that the perceived intensity of emotional expressions was reduced when the face was covered by face masks. This can be regarded as conceptual replication and extension of the impairing effects of face masks on the recognition of emotional expressions. Next, by analyzing valence and arousal ratings, the data illustrated that emotional expressions were regressed toward neutrality for masked faces relative to no-masked faces. This effect was grossly pronounced for happy facial expressions, less for neutral expressions, and absent for sad expressions. The sex of masked faces was also less accurately identified. Finally, masked faces looked older and less attractive. Post hoc correlational analyses revealed correlation coefficient differences between no-masked and masked faces. The differences occurred in some characteristic pairs (e.g., Age and Attractiveness, Age and Trustworthiness) but not in others. This suggested that the ratings for some characteristics could be influenced by the presence of face masks. Similarly, the ratings of some characteristics could also be influenced by other characteristics, irrespective of face masks. We speculate that the amount of information available on a face could drive our perception of others during social communication. Future directions for research were discussed.
口罩对情绪表达外观和不变特征的影响
抽象面孔传达了很多关于一个人的信息。然而,口罩的使用会遮挡面部的重要部位。已经有信息表明,口罩会改变对情绪表达和个人身份等可变特征的处理。为了调查口罩是否影响面部信息的处理,我们比较了全脸和戴口罩的人的评分。196名参与者完成了两个平行版本的实验中的一个。数据显示,口罩对各种特征的影响各不相同。首先,我们发现,当面部被口罩覆盖时,情绪表达的感知强度会降低。这可以被视为口罩对情绪表达识别损害作用的概念复制和延伸。接下来,通过分析效价和唤醒评级,数据表明,相对于没有戴口罩的脸,戴口罩的人的情绪表达向中性回归。这种影响在快乐的面部表情中非常明显,在中性表情中则较少,在悲伤表情中则没有。蒙面人脸的性别也不太准确。最后,戴面具的脸看起来更老了,吸引力也降低了。事后相关分析揭示了无蒙面和蒙面人脸之间的相关系数差异。差异出现在一些特征对中(例如,年龄和吸引力、年龄和可信度),但在其他特征对中没有。这表明,某些特征的评级可能会受到口罩的影响。同样,一些特征的评级也可能受到其他特征的影响,而与口罩无关。我们推测,在社交过程中,脸上可用的信息量可能会驱动我们对他人的感知。讨论了未来的研究方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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