Abstract

Facial emotional expressions are a salient source of information for nonverbal social interactions. However, their impact on action planning and execution is highly controversial. In this vein, the effect of the two threatening facial expressions, i.e., angry and fearful faces, is still unclear. Frequently, fear and anger are used interchangeably as negative emotions. However, they convey different social signals. Unlike fear, anger indicates a direct threat toward the observer. To provide new evidence on this issue, we exploited a novel design based on two versions of a Go/No-go task. In the emotional version, healthy participants had to perform the same movement for pictures of fearful, angry, or happy faces and withhold it when neutral expressions were presented. The same pictures were shown in the control version, but participants had to move or suppress the movement, according to the actor’s gender. This experimental design allows us to test task relevance’s impact on emotional stimuli without conflating movement planning with target detection and task switching. We found that the emotional content of faces interferes with actions only when task-relevant, i.e., the effect of emotions is context-dependent. We also showed that angry faces qualitatively had the same effect as fearful faces, i.e., both negative emotions decreased response readiness with respect to happy expressions. However, anger has a much greater impact than fear, as it increases both the rates of mistakes and the time of movement execution. We interpreted these results, suggesting that participants have to exploit more cognitive resources to appraise threatening than positive facial expressions, and angry than fearful faces before acting.

Highlights

  • Social cognition, i.e., ability to make sense of others’ behavior, intentions, and emotions, is aimed at achieving a mutual understanding between individuals, allowing each to produce adaptive actions within a given context

  • The main effect of Emotion was because participants reacted more slowly after the presentation of angry faces (M = 382.8 ms, 95% confidence interval (CI) [375.6, 390.0]) than after the presentation of fearful faces (M = 367.5 ms, 95% CI (361.6, 373.3)) and happy faces (M = 362.9 ms, 95% CI (357.3, 368.5))

  • We found that angry faces, when task-relevant, increased movement times (MTs) with respect to all other facial expressions, suggesting that participants’ attention is attracted even during the execution of the reaching arm movement

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Summary

Introduction

I.e., ability to make sense of others’ behavior, intentions, and emotions, is aimed at achieving a mutual understanding between individuals, allowing each to produce adaptive actions within a given context. In this sense, social cognition is a particular category of decision-making processes. The recognition of emotional facial expressions profoundly influences this process, as it automatically triggers appropriate behaviors in a social environment [1,2]. The sight of angry or fearful faces of conspecifics automatically triggers defensive responses in the observer [3,4]. Impairments in recognition of facial emotions such as those occurring in psychopathy [6] or schizophrenia [7], or after bilateral amygdala lesions [8], severely compromise social interactions

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