Abstract

Mental state attribution, an important aspect of social cognition, refers to the verbalization of mental state references observed in another person. Fictional film narratives can elicit social cognition and mental state attribution specifically, however, little is known about the cinematographic techniques underlying this effect and their link to mental state attribution. The present experiment focuses on the role of close-up shots of the character's face in viewers’ mental state attribution, as well as in their cognitive and affective processing more generally. The online experiment (N = 495) included thirteen versions of an animated film and employed a 6 (different number of close-up shots) × 2 (facial expressions) factorial between-subject design, with an additional zero close-up control condition. Participants were randomly assigned to one version of the film and subsequently asked to describe the story (with and without a prompt for mental state attribution). In these free responses, the study used a quantitative content analytic method (with independent blind-coders) to identify the proportion of spontaneous and prompted mental state attributions (i.e. explicit mental state references to the character), as well as cognitive and affective processing employed by viewers. Additionally, we tested the moderation effect of character facial expression (in the close-up) and participant gender. Confirming our main hypothesis, close-up frequency significantly influenced spontaneous, but not prompted mental state attribution. Results indicate that increasing the number of close-ups may elicit a higher proportion of spontaneous mental state attribution up to a certain point, beyond which it may decrease the proportion of spontaneous mental state attributions. Results suggest that the effect of close-up frequency is specific to mental state attribution rather than some general effect on cognitive and affective processing of narratives.

Highlights

  • Mental state attribution, an important aspect of social cognition, refers to the verbalization of mental state references observed in another person

  • Mar's (2018) Social Processes and Content Entrained by Narrative (SpaCEN) framework outlines two potential pathways through which exposure to fiction may lead to increased social cognition: through exposure to social cognitive content and/or by activation of social cognitive processes (Mar, 2018)

  • Our results suggest that the effect of close-up frequency is not a general effect on cognitive and affective processing of narratives, rather a specific effect on the level of spontaneously occurring mental state references to protagonists

Read more

Summary

Introduction

An important aspect of social cognition, refers to the verbalization of mental state references observed in another person. Despite the growing body of empirical studies investigating the effect of exposure to fictional story content on social cognition processes (Mumper & Gerrig, 2017), surprisingly little research examined the role of non-content related formal features on social cognition, especially in cinematic narratives. Due to this gap, fundamental parts of the media reception process remain undertheorized. Previous research differentiated spontaneously occurring mental state attribution, referring to the individual tendency to use mental state references when describing events or other people, and prompted mental state attribution, that is the extent to which events and other people are described in terms of mental states when one is explicitly asked to do so (e.g. Apperly, 2012; Apperly & Butterfill, 2009; Frith, 2004; Klin, 2000; Meins, Fernyhough, Johnson & Lidstone, 2006; Rooney & Bálint, 2018)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call