Abstract

Social exclusion is a painful experience that is felt as a threat to the human need to belong and can lead to increased aggressive and anti-social behaviours, and results in emotional and cognitive numbness. Excluded individuals also seem to show an automatic tuning to positivity: they tend to increase their selective attention towards social acceptance signals. Despite these effects known in the literature, the consequences of social exclusion on social information processing still need to be explored in depth. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of social exclusion on processing two features that are strictly bound in the appraisal of the meaning of facial expressions: gaze direction and emotional expression. In two experiments (N = 60, N = 45), participants were asked to identify gaze direction or emotional expressions from facial stimuli, in which both these features were manipulated. They performed these tasks in a four-block crossed design after being socially included or excluded using the Cyberball game. Participants’ empathy and self-reported emotions were recorded using the Empathy Quotient (EQ) and PANAS questionnaires. The Need Threat Scale and three additional questions were also used as manipulation checks in the second experiment. In both experiments, excluded participants showed to be less accurate than included participants in gaze direction discrimination. Modulatory effects of direct gaze (Experiment 1) and sad expression (Experiment 2) on the effects of social exclusion were found on response times (RTs) in the emotion recognition task. Specific differences in the reaction to social exclusion between males and females were also found in Experiment 2: excluded male participants tended to be less accurate and faster than included male participants, while excluded females showed a more accurate and slower performance than included female participants. No influence of social exclusion on PANAS or EQ scores was found. Results are discussed in the context of the importance of identifying gaze direction in appraisal theories.

Highlights

  • Everyone has experienced social exclusion in different measures

  • The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of social exclusion on processing two features that are strictly bound in the appraisal of the meaning of facial expressions: gaze direction and emotional expression

  • In Experiment 1 we found that socially excluded participants were less accurate than included participants in the gaze direction identification task, while excluded participants were slightly slower than included ones during the emotion recognition task, only when processing stimuli with direct gaze

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Summary

Introduction

Everyone has experienced social exclusion in different measures. Everyone knows how painful, crippling, and confusing this experience can be. This pain arises because being excluded is a threat to our need to belong [1], one of the most fundamental human needs. Social exclusion is defined as being ignored and excluded by someone [2]. The terms “ostracism” and “social exclusion” will be used as synonyms in this study. In addition to our personal experience, we know from many studies that social exclusion has specific impacts on our behaviour, cognitive abilities, emotional feelings, and especially our motivation, defined as fundamental needs (see [3] for a complete review)

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