Abstract

Facial expressions can display personal emotions and indicate an individual’s intentions within a social situation. They are extremely important to the social interaction of individuals. Background scenes in which faces are perceived provide important contextual information for facial expression processing. The purpose of this study was to explore the time course of emotional congruency effects in processing faces and scenes simultaneously by recording event-related potentials (ERPs). The behavioral results found that the categorization of facial expression was faster and more accurate when the face was emotionally congruent than incongruent with the emotion displayed by the scene. In ERPs the late positive potential (LPP) amplitudes were modulated by the emotional congruency between faces and scenes. Specifically, happy faces elicited larger LPP amplitudes within positive than within negative scenes and fearful faces within negative scenes elicited larger LPP amplitudes than within positive scenes. The results did not find the scene effects on the P1 and N170 components. These findings indicate that emotional congruency effects could occur in late stages of facial expression processing, reflecting motivated attention allocation.

Highlights

  • Facial expressions can display personal emotions and indicate an individual’s intentions within a social situation and, are extremely important for social interaction

  • The results showed that the emotional content of verbal descriptions could modulate the amplitudes of the late positive potential (LPP), which demonstrated that the integration of facial expressions with verbal descriptions that provided contextual information occurred at a later stage of face processing

  • Our study found that the LPP amplitudes were larger for the congruent emotional conditions when compared with the incongruent conditions at frontal, central and parietal sites

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Summary

Introduction

Facial expressions can display personal emotions and indicate an individual’s intentions within a social situation and, are extremely important for social interaction. A lot of previous studies have explored isolated facial expression processing. Individuals rarely interact directly with context-less faces. There has been growing evidence regarding the influence of context on facial expression processing (Aviezer et al, 2008; Barrett et al, 2011; Wieser and Brosch, 2012). It is the primary aim of the present study to contribute to this body of knowledge

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