Abstract

Body language reading is of significance for daily life social cognition and successful social interaction, and constitutes a core component of social competence. Yet it is unclear whether our ability for body language reading is gender specific. In the present work, female and male observers had to visually recognize emotions through point-light human locomotion performed by female and male actors with different emotional expressions. For subtle emotional expressions only, males surpass females in recognition accuracy and readiness to respond to happy walking portrayed by female actors, whereas females exhibit a tendency to be better in recognition of hostile angry locomotion expressed by male actors. In contrast to widespread beliefs about female superiority in social cognition, the findings suggest that gender effects in recognition of emotions from human locomotion are modulated by emotional content of actions and opposite actor gender. In a nutshell, the study makes a further step in elucidation of gender impact on body language reading and on neurodevelopmental and psychiatric deficits in visual social cognition.

Highlights

  • Every single day we are watching strangers passing by

  • No gender effects were found in recognition accuracy of displays that were recognized above the cut-off

  • Males surpass females in recognition of happy walking portrayed by female actors (U = 475.1, p,0.016), whereas females exhibit a tendency to be better in recognition of angry locomotion expressed by male actors (t(51) = 1.68, p,0.098)

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Summary

Introduction

Every single day we are watching strangers passing by. We automatically determine speed, trajectory, and direction of their locomotion in order to avoid collisions and safely get through a crowd, and spontaneously judge mood, intentions, dispositions and personality traits of walkers, which may be useful for a potential social interaction. Adult perceivers discern emotions and dispositions of others conveyed by point-light displays that reduce other kinds of information except for body motion [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]. This ability seems to require a period of maturation during childhood [7]. In agreement with the assumption that biological motion processing serves a hallmark of social cognition [15], in typically developing adults and individuals with autistic disorders, the ability to reveal emotions from point-light body motion may be related to more basic capability for discrimination between canonical and scrambled biological motion [16,17]

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