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Journal ArticleDOI

Electromyographic activity over facial muscle regions can differentiate the valence and intensity of affective reactions.

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TLDR
In this article, facial electromyographic (EMG) activity was used to distinguish both the valence and intensity of the affective reaction to the visual stimuli, and independent judges were unable to determine from viewing videotapes of the subjects' facial displays whether a positive or negative stimulus had been presented or whether a mildly or moderately intense stimulus was presented.
Abstract
Physiological measures have traditionally been viewed in social psychology as useful only in assessing general arousal and therefore as incapable of distinguishing between positive and negative affective states. This view is challenged in the present report. Sixteen subjects in a pilot study were exposed briefly to slides and tones that were mildly to moderately evocative of positive and negative affect. Facial electromyographic (EMG) activity differentiated both the valence and intensity of the affective reaction. Moreover, independent judges were unable to determine from viewing videotapes of the subjects' facial displays whether a positive or negative stimulus had been presented or whether a mildly or moderately intense stimulus had been presented. In the full experiment, 28 subjects briefly viewed slides of scenes that were mildly to moderately evocative of positive and negative affect. Again, EMG activity over the brow (corrugator supercilia), eye (orbicularis oculi), and cheek (zygomatic major) muscle regions differentiated the pleasantness and intensity of individuals' affective reactions to the visual stimuli even though visual inspection of the videotapes again indicated that expressions of emotion were not apparent. These results suggest that gradients of EMG activity over the muscles of facial expression can provide objective and continuous probes of affective processes that are too subtle or fleeting to evoke expressions observable under normal conditions of social interaction.

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Citations
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Emotional responses to music: experience, expression, and physiology

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured self-reported emotion, facial muscle activity, and autonomic activity in 32 participants while they listened to popular music composed with either a happy or a sad emotional expression.
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Embodiment of emotion concepts.

TL;DR: Experiment 4, using a property generation task, provided support for the conclusion that emotions embodied in conceptual tasks are context-dependent situated simulations rather than associated emotional reactions and implications for theories of embodied simulation and for emotion theories are discussed.
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Facial expressions and the regulation of emotions.

TL;DR: A new developmental model of expression-feeling relations provides a framework for reevaluating previous research and for understanding the conditions under which expressions are effective in activating and regulating feeling states.
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The Effects of Message Valence and Listener Arousal on Attention, Memory, and Facial Muscular Responses to Radio Advertisements:

TL;DR: Results demonstrated the validity of using facial EMG to assess the valence of emotional response to media messages and demonstrated the effects of message valence and listener arousal on attention and memory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anxiety selectively disrupts visuospatial working memory.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed four methodological desiderata for studying how task-irrelevant affect modulates cognition and presented data from an experiment satisfying them, consistent with accounts of the hemispheric asymmetries characterizing withdrawal-related negative affect and visuospatial working memory.
References
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