Abstract
Humans can recognize emotions expressed through body motion with high accuracy even when the stimuli are impoverished. However, most of the research on body motion has relied on exaggerated displays of emotions. In this paper we present two experiments where we investigated whether emotional body expressions could be recognized when they were recorded during natural narration. Our actors were free to use their entire body, face, and voice to express emotions, but our resulting visual stimuli used only the upper body motion trajectories in the form of animated stick figures. Observers were asked to perform an emotion recognition task on short motion sequences using a large and balanced set of emotions (amusement, joy, pride, relief, surprise, anger, disgust, fear, sadness, shame, and neutral). Even with only upper body motion available, our results show recognition accuracy significantly above chance level and high consistency rates among observers. In our first experiment, that used more classic emotion induction setup, all emotions were well recognized. In the second study that employed narrations, four basic emotion categories (joy, anger, fear, and sadness), three non-basic emotion categories (amusement, pride, and shame) and the “neutral” category were recognized above chance. Interestingly, especially in the second experiment, observers showed a bias toward anger when recognizing the motion sequences for emotions. We discovered that similarities between motion sequences across the emotions along such properties as mean motion speed, number of peaks in the motion trajectory and mean motion span can explain a large percent of the variation in observers' responses. Overall, our results show that upper body motion is informative for emotion recognition in narrative scenarios.
Highlights
IntroductionAND RELATED RESEARCHEmotion is an integral part of human-human interaction. During communication, we receive and transmit emotional information through many channels: prosody, facial expressions, word choice, posture, and body motion
AND RELATED RESEARCHEmotion is an integral part of human-human interaction
All emotion categories were correctly identified by participants on above chance level (10%), all Holm-corrected p-values are below 0.001 for one-tailed ttests
Summary
AND RELATED RESEARCHEmotion is an integral part of human-human interaction. During communication, we receive and transmit emotional information through many channels: prosody, facial expressions, word choice, posture, and body motion. The human body is often perceived as a tool for actions (e.g., walking, grasping, and carrying), but it is an important medium for emotional expression (De Meijer, 1989; de Gelder et al, 2010). The research on emotional body language is challenging because of the complexity of biological motion, since the human body has hundreds of degrees of freedom and can be used for action and emotion expression simultaneously. In the resulting point-light stimuli only these bright marks are visible to the observer Such stimuli are strongly degraded, and so the identity of initial actors, as well as their age, gender, and body shape are hidden from the observer. The following years have seen point-light technique frequently applied in research on perception of biological motion, including emotion recognition studies. Many studies have investigated the recognition of human actions (Pollick et al, 2001a) and intentions (Manera et al, 2010), identity (Loula et al, 2005), gender www.frontiersin.org
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