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Journal Article

Citation

Slessor G, Insch P, Donaldson I, Sciaponaite V, Adamowicz M, Phillips LH. J. Gerontol. B Psychol. Sci. Soc. Sci. 2022; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Gerontological Society of America, Publisher Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/geronb/gbac097

PMID

35948271

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Older adults are often less accurate than younger counterparts at identifying emotions such as anger, sadness and fear from faces. They also look less at the eyes and more at the mouth during emotion perception. The current studies advance understanding of the nature of these age effects on emotional processing.

METHOD: Younger and older participants identified emotions from pictures of eyes or mouths (Experiment 1) and incongruent mouth-eyes emotion combinations (Experiment 2). In Experiment 3 participants categorised emotions from pictures in which face masks covered the mouth region.

RESULTS: Older adults were worse than young at identifying anger and sadness from eyes, but better at identifying the same emotions from the mouth region (Experiment 1) and they were more likely than young to use information from the mouth to classify anger, fear and disgust (Experiment 2). In Experiment 3 facemasks impaired perception of anger, sadness and fear more for older compared to younger adults.

DISCUSSION: These studies indicate that older people are more able than young to interpret emotional information from the mouth, they are more biased to use information from the mouth, and suffer more difficulty in emotion perception when the mouth is covered with a facemask. This has implications for social communication in different age groups.


Language: en

Keywords

Aging; Emotion Perception; Social Cognition; Social Interaction

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