Abstract

The purpose of this study was to compare emotion and personality trait attributions to facial expression between American and Indian samples. Data were collected using Amazon.com’s Mechanical Turk (MTurk). Participants in this study were asked to correctly identify the emotion and make inferences from pictures of three different facial expressions (scowling, frowning, and smiling) of young white females and males in six photographs. Each picture was randomly presented for 10 seconds followed by four randomized questions about the individual in the picture. The first question asked participants to identify the emotion shown from a list of six emotions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, surprise). The next three questions consisted of a) condensed sets of the Big Five personality traits, b) the three Self-Assessment Manikin dimensions (SAM), ands) various social perceptions. Smiling facial expressions were hypothesized to be inferred as happy and to have the following positive inferences in both cultures: attractive, not threatening, agreeable, extroverted, and pleasing to look at, positive, conscientious, and open-minded a “Halo Effect.” Scowling facial expressions were hypothesized to have the following attributions: anger, unattractive, threatening, excitable, close-minded, not pleasing to look at, bad, negative, dominant, disagreeable, and unconscientiously a “Horns Effect.” Frowning facial expressions were hypothesized to be perceived as: sad, unattractive, good, submissive, not threatening, not pleasing to look at, positive, and calm anin-between effect. Generally, results showed that both cultures attributed the hypothesized emotional and trait attributions to the six facial expressions for all four questions, except for the Indians on the scowling female facial expression across each of the four questions.

Highlights

  • The results showed a prominent pattern of personality trait grouping based on facial expression that were utilized to create the questions and answer choices for the survey in this study

  • The remaining three questions all had three answer choices that scaled from the most positive to negative, according to the emotion the answer was associated with based on previous research (Radeke & Stahelski, 2015), and on the emotion question scale

  • There was variability in answer choices for American and Indian participants, the average answers of both groups for each of the four questions were primarily the correct predetermined answer choices according to the universality hypothesis

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of this study was to compare emotion and personality trait attributions to facial expressions between American and Asian Indian samples

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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