Abstract

Accurately interpreting other’s emotions through facial expressions has important adaptive values for social interactions. However, due to the stereotypical social perception of overweight individuals as carefree, humorous, and light-hearted, the body weight of those with whom we interact may have a systematic influence on our emotion judgment even though it has no relevance to the expressed emotion itself. In this experimental study, we examined the role of body weight in faces on the affective perception of facial expressions. We hypothesized that the weight perceived in a face would bias the assessment of an emotional expression, with overweight faces generally more likely to be perceived as having more positive and less negative expressions than healthy weight faces. Using two-alternative forced-choice perceptual decision tasks, participants were asked to sort the emotional expressions of overweight and healthy weight facial stimuli that had been gradually morphed across six emotional intensity levels into one of two categories—“neutral vs. happy” (Experiment 1) and “neutral vs. sad” (Experiment 2). As predicted, our results demonstrated that overweight faces were more likely to be categorized as happy (i.e., lower happy decision threshold) and less likely to be categorized as sad (i.e., higher sad decision threshold) compared to healthy weight faces that had the same levels of emotional intensity. The neutral-sad decision threshold shift was negatively correlated with participant’s own fear of becoming fat, that is, those without a fear of becoming fat more strongly perceived overweight faces as sad relative to those with a higher fear. These findings demonstrate that the weight of the face systematically influences how its emotional expression is interpreted, suggesting that being overweight may make emotional expressions appear more happy and less sad than they really are.

Highlights

  • Body weight has become a global focal point as obesity rates increase in many countries

  • We aimed to explore whether explicit attitudes about being overweight or one’s own weight would impact the perceptual decision threshold for emotional categorization by examining the relationship between scores on the Anti-Fat Attitudes (AFA) questionnaire [37] and body mass index (BMI) with subjective perceptual threshold shift values

  • Research has shown that overweight individuals tend to have higher levels of depression, lower self-esteem, and higher perceived stress [12,13,14], overweight individuals are often stereotyped by others as being happy-go-lucky and carefree [16, 17, 24]

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Summary

Introduction

Body weight has become a global focal point as obesity rates increase in many countries. In addition to having serious implications on physical well-being, the social consequences of being overweight have a significant, often overlooked, impact on one’s life. There is evidence that overweight job applicants are less likely to be hired than healthy weight individuals and that they are paid less and perceived as less qualified, less likely to succeed, and having poorer leadership skills [4,5,6,7]. The consequences of being overweight have been shown to permeate through different social contexts, with negative weight-stigma experiences found in interactions between friends, spouses, and even parents [11]. It is apparent that the consequences of being overweight can have a significant negative impact on one’s social, physical, and psychological functioning

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