The distinct effects of fearful and disgusting scenes on self-relevant face recognition.

Yuan Yuan, Lili Guan, Yifei Cao, Yang Xu
Author Information
  1. Yuan Yuan: School of Psychology, Northeast Normal University.
  2. Lili Guan: School of Psychology, Northeast Normal University.
  3. Yifei Cao: School of Psychology, Northeast Normal University.
  4. Yang Xu: School of Psychology, Northeast Normal University.

Abstract

Self-face recognition denotes the process by which a person can recognize their own face by distinguishing it from another's face. Although many research studies have explored the inhibition effect of negative information on self-relevant face processing, few researchers have examined whether negative scenes influence self-relevant face processing. Fearful and disgusting scenes are typical negative scenes, but little research to data has examined their discriminative effects on self-relevant face recognition. To investigate these issues, the current study explored the effect of negative scenes on self-relevant face recognition. In Study 1, 44 participants (20 men, 24 women) were asked to judge the orientation of a target face (self-face or friend-face) pictured in a negative or neutral scene, whereas 40 participants (19 men, 21 women) were asked to complete the same task in a fearful, disgusting, or neutral scene in Study 2. The results showed that negative scenes inhibited the speed of recognizing self-faces. Furthermore, the above effect of negative scenes on self-relevant face recognition occurred with fearful rather than disgusting scenes. Our findings suggest the distinct effects of fearful scenes and disgusting scenes on self-relevant face processing, which may be associated with the automatic attentional capture to negative scenes (especially fearful scenes) and the tendency to escape self-awareness.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Humans
Female
Male
Young Adult
Fear
Facial Recognition
Recognition, Psychology
Adult
Disgust
Attention
Self Concept
Reaction Time
Adolescent

Word Cloud

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