1239758
doi
10.5281/zenodo.1239758
oai:zenodo.org:1239758
user-c3-kauschke-schwarzer
Daniela Bahn
Philipps-University Marburg
Christina Kauschke
Philipps-University Marburg
Monika Tschense
Philipps-University Marburg
Franziska Degé
Justus-Liebig University Giessen
Gudrun Schwarzer
Justus-Liebig University Giessen
Auditory Emotion Word Primes Influence Emotional Face Categorization in Children and Adults, but Not Vice Versa
Michael Vesker
Justus-Liebig University Giessen
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
<p>Abstract</p>
<p>In order to assess how the perception of audible speech and facial expressions influence one another for the perception of emotions, and how this influence might change over the course of development, we conducted two cross-modal priming experiments with three age groups of children (6-, 9-, and 12-years old), as well as college-aged adults. In Experiment 1, 74 children and 24 adult participants were tasked with categorizing photographs of emotional faces as positive or negative as quickly as possible after being primed with emotion words presented via audio in valence-congruent and valence-incongruent trials. In Experiment 2, 67 children and 24 adult participants carried out a similar categorization task, but with faces acting as visual primes, and emotion words acting as auditory targets. The results of Experiment 1 showed that participants made more errors when categorizing positive faces primed by negative words versus positive words, and that 6-year-old children are particularly sensitive to positive word primes, giving faster correct responses regardless of target valence. Meanwhile, the results of Experiment 2 did not show any congruency effects for priming by facial expressions. Thus, audible emotion words seem to exert an influence on the emotional categorization of faces, while faces do not seem to influence the categorization of emotion words in a significant way.</p>
Raw data set for paper (same title and authors as the data-set) published in Frontiers in Psychology.
Zenodo
2018-05-01
info:eu-repo/semantics/other
1239757
user-c3-kauschke-schwarzer
1580723482.536519
607272
md5:bb5100642c22ee1087e021b867b7fbbf
https://zenodo.org/records/1239758/files/exp 1 data word prime face target.xlsx
513653
md5:cda3d71407e04dd8a135ec375ac65239
https://zenodo.org/records/1239758/files/exp 2 data face prime word target.xlsx
public
10.5281/zenodo.1239757
isVersionOf
doi
Frontiers in Psychology
2018-05-01