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Effects of Direct and Averted Gaze on the Perception of Facially Communicated Emotion.
Authors:Adams  Reginald B  Jr; Kleck  Robert E
Abstract:Research has largely neglected the effects of gaze direction cues on the perception of facial expressions of emotion. It was hypothesized that when gaze direction matches the underlying behavioral intent (approach-avoidance) communicated by an emotional expression, the perception of that emotion would be enhanced (i.e., shared signal hypothesis). Specifically, the authors expected that (a) direct gaze would enhance the perception of approach-oriented emotions (anger and joy) and (b) averted eye gaze would enhance the perception of avoidance-oriented emotions (fear and sadness). Three studies supported this hypothesis. Study 1 examined emotional trait attributions made to neutral faces. Study 2 examined ratings of ambiguous facial blends of anger and fear. Study 3 examined the influence of gaze on the perception of highly prototypical expressions. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:emotional trait attributions  ambiguous facial blends  anger  fear  eye gaze  cues  gaze direction  facial expressions  facial emotion  behavioral intent  avoidance  approach  shared signal hypothesis
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