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Facial expressions in response to a highly surprising event exceeding the field of vision: a test of Darwin's theory of surprise
Authors
Achim Schützwohl
Bennett
+37 more
Carroll
Charlesworth
Cohen
Darwin
Ekman
Ekman
Elfenbein
Fernández-Dols
Fischer
Fleiss
Fridlund
Fridlund
Hiatt
Hintze
Holodynski
Horstmann
Izard
Kastellec
Kraut
Landis
Ludden
Parkinson
Parrott
Rainer Reisenzein
Reisenzein
Reisenzein
Reisenzein
Reisenzein
Reisenzein
Ruiz-Belda
Russell
Russell
Scherer
Schützwohl
Tomkins
Vanhamme
Wagner
Publication date
1 November 2012
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
Abstract
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.According to the affect program theory of facial displays, the evolutionary core of the human emotion system consists of a small set of discrete emotion mechanisms that comprise motor programs for emotion-specific facial displays. However, research on surprise has found that surprising events often fail to elicit the associated facial expression (widened eyes, raised eyebrows, mouth opening). The present study tested a refined Darwinian account of the facial expression of surprise, according to which surprising events cause widened eyes and raised eyebrows if they exceed the field of vision, as these facial changes increase the visual field and facilitate visual search. To test this hypothesis, we staged a surprising event that engulfed the field of vision: When the participants left the laboratory, they unexpectedly found themselves in a new room, a small chamber with bold green walls and a red office chair. In addition, to explore the role of social context for the expression of surprise, in two of three experimental conditions, a stranger or a friend they had brought to the experiment was sitting on the chair. The results provided no support for the Darwinian account of the facial expression of surprise. A complete expression of surprise was observed in 5% of the participants, and the individual components of the expression were shown only by a minority, regardless of social context. These findings reinforce doubts about the adequacy of affect program theory for the case of surprise
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info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.evolhumbe...
Last time updated on 01/04/2019
Brunel University Research Archive
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oai:bura.brunel.ac.uk:2438/654...
Last time updated on 15/02/2013