Abstract

A number of studies have shown that individuals often spontaneously mimic the facial expressions of others, a tendency known as facial mimicry. This tendency has generally been considered a reflex-like “automatic” response, but several recent studies have shown that the degree of mimicry may be moderated by contextual information. However, the cognitive and motivational factors underlying the contextual moderation of facial mimicry require further empirical investigation. In this study, we present evidence that the degree to which participants spontaneously mimic a target’s facial expressions depends on whether participants are motivated to infer the target’s emotional state. In the first study we show that facial mimicry, assessed by facial electromyography, occurs more frequently when participants are specifically instructed to infer a target’s emotional state than when given no instruction. In the second study, we replicate this effect using the Facial Action Coding System to show that participants are more likely to mimic facial expressions of emotion when they are asked to infer the target’s emotional state, rather than make inferences about a physical trait unrelated to emotion. These results provide convergent evidence that the explicit goal of understanding a target’s emotional state affects the degree of facial mimicry shown by the perceiver, suggesting moderation of reflex-like motor activities by higher cognitive processes.

Highlights

  • In human societies there is a continual need to coordinate and cooperate with other non-kin individuals in a wide range of social settings

  • In Study 2, we introduce another condition in which participants are instructed to infer non-emotional traits of the target before the video presentation, and their facial muscle activity is assessed using the Facial Action Coding System (FACS), a less invasive procedure than EMG

  • Notice that the best-fit model in Study 2 was identical to that of Study 1, clearly replicating its results using FACS coding and the Trait-Judgment condition as a control for methodological modifications. The results from these two experiments consistently showed that the degree of facial mimicry increased when participants were given the explicit goal of inferring targets’ emotional states

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Summary

Introduction

In human societies there is a continual need to coordinate and cooperate with other non-kin individuals in a wide range of social settings. To coordinate effectively with others while minimizing the potential risk of exploitation, individuals must accurately understand the intentions and emotions of others [1]. While in some instances intentional effort is required to infer the thoughts and feelings of others, in many cases it seems that people can understand each other’s.

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