Abstract

AbstractLanguage can evoke powerful emotions and influence consequent actions in readers, but the mechanisms underlying interactions of language and emotion are largely unknown. Since Darwin, emotional expressions have been implicated in emotional cognition, experience and understanding, but the functional role of the affective periphery is difficult to test. In a first experiment, facial electromyography revealed that silent reading of emotional (angry, sad, and happy) sentences automatically elicits differential patterns of activity in facial muscles used in expression of corresponding emotions (smiling and frowning). In a second experiment, temporary paralysis of the facial muscle corrugator supercilli (responsible for producing a frown) hindered processing, relative to pre-injection baseline, for angry and sad sentences, while processing for happy sentences was unaffected. These findings suggest a bi-directional mechanism between emotion and language, offer new evidence for facial feedback theories of emotion, and report a novel effect of botulinum toxin-A on human cognition.

Highlights

  • Angry sentences Reeling from the fight with that stubborn bigot, you slam the car door

  • The pushy telemarketer won't let you return to your dinner

  • Happy sentences The water park is refreshing on the hot summer day

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Summary

Introduction

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