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The Average Facial Expression of a Crowd Influences Impressions of Individual Expressions

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Griffiths, SL 

Abstract

People can accurately assess the "mood of a crowd" by rapidly extracting the average intensity of all the individual expressions, when the crowd consists of a set of faces comprising different expressions of the same individual. Here, we investigate the processes involved when people judge the expression intensity of individual faces that appear in the context of a more naturalistic crowd of different individuals' faces. We show that judgments of the intensity of happy and angry expressions for individual faces are biased toward the group mean expression intensity, even when the faces are all different individuals. In a second experiment, we demonstrate that this bias is not due to a generic tendency to endorse intermediate intensity expressions more frequently than more extreme intensity expressions. Together, these findings suggest that people integrate ensemble information about the group average expression when they make judgments of individual faces' expressions.

Description

Keywords

Adult, Emotions, Facial Expression, Facial Recognition, Female, Humans, Male, Social Perception, Young Adult

Journal Title

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0096-1523
1939-1277

Volume Title

44

Publisher

American Psychological Association