Journal of Personality and Social Psycholology, 1990 Nov; 59(5):1032-9

Relative contributions of expressive behavior and contextual information to the judgment of the emotional state of another.*

Nakamura M, Buck R, Kenny DA
University of Connecticut, Storrs 06269-1085.

This study used a technique for assessing the relative impact of facial-gestural expressions, as opposed to contextual information regarding the elicitor and situation, on the judgment of emotion. In Study 1, 28 undergraduates rated videotapes of spontaneous facial-gestural expressions and separately rated the emotionally loaded color slides that elicited those expressions. The source clarities of the expressions and slides were matched using correlation and distance measures, and 18 expressions and 9 slides were selected. In Study 2, 72 undergraduate receivers were shown systematic pairings of these expressions and slides and rated the emotional state of the expresser, who was supposedly watching that slide under public or private situational conditions. Expressions were found to be more important sources for all emotion judgments. For female receivers slides were relatively more important in the public than in the private situation.

* Reproduced with permission of the APA - Journal of Personality and Social Psychology