Abstract

The neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) has been shown to influence social cognition, including better recognition of emotion in faces. One potential way in which OT improves emotion recognition is by increasing the correspondence between a perceiver's own facial activity and observed facial expressions. Here we investigate whether increased facial synchrony while viewing facial expressions increases emotion recognition, and whether this effect is moderated by OT. Change in visual attention as captured by eye-gaze is another way in which OT might improve emotion recognition. We also examine visual attention to observed expressions, and whether this is influenced by OT. One hundred and four male undergraduates took part in a double-blind, randomized, between-subjects study in which they self-administered either a placebo (PL) or 24 IU of OT before viewing dynamic facial expressions of emotion, during which their facial activity and eye-gaze were measured, before answering questions on emotion recognition and affiliation. It was hypothesized that participants in the OT condition would exhibit more facial synchrony than would those in the PL condition, and that OT would influence time spent looking at the eye region of target faces. Consistent with previous research, participants in the OT condition were marginally but significantly better at emotion recognition than those in the PL condition. However, participants in the OT condition displayed less facial synchrony for fearful expressions, and there was no effect of OT on measures of eye-gaze. These results suggest that OT does not improve emotion recognition through increased facial synchrony or changing visual attention.

Highlights

  • The neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) has been found to play a complex, important role in various aspects of social cognition (Van IJzendoorn and Bakermans-Kranenburg, 2012)

  • In the present study we investigated the influence of OT on emotion recognition, facial synchrony, and eye-gaze, and whether improvements in emotion recognition are linked to facial synchrony or eye-gaze

  • A significant main effect of emotion revealed that happy (M = 99.880, SE = .123), angry (M = 99.029, SE = .450), and fearful (M = 99.029, SE = .333) facial expressions were correctly identified to a greater extent than sad (M = 82.500, SE = .939) expressions, F(3, 300) = 232.819, p < .001, ηp2 =

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Summary

Introduction

The neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) has been found to play a complex, important role in various aspects of social cognition (Van IJzendoorn and Bakermans-Kranenburg, 2012). Several studies (Korb et al, 2016; Pavarini et al, 2019; Trilla et al, 2020) have examined OT effects on facial synchrony, finding mixed results. Another candidate mechanism is visual attention, the idea being that increased attention to certain regions of the face improves emotion recognition (e.g., Klin et al, 2002). Several studies have investigated whether OT influences eyegaze (Domes et al, 2007; Guastella et al, 2008; Hubble, Daughters et al, 2017), variations in methodology present mixed findings. In the present study we investigated the influence of OT on emotion recognition, facial synchrony, and eye-gaze, and whether improvements in emotion recognition are linked to facial synchrony or eye-gaze

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