Brief Report

Authors: Bonanno G.1; Keltner D.2

Source: Cognition and Emotion, Volume 18, Number 3, April 2004 , pp. 431-444(14)

Publisher: Psychology Press, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

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Abstract:

Recently, investigators have challenged long-standing assumptions that facial expressions of emotion follow specific emotion-eliciting events and relate to other emotion-specific responses. We address these challenges by comparing spontaneous facial expressions of anger, sadness, laughter, and smiling with concurrent, "on-line" appraisal themes from narrative data, and by examining whether coherence between facial and appraisal components were associated with increased experience of emotion. Consistent with claims that emotion systems are loosely coupled, facial expressions of anger and sadness co-occurred to a moderate degree with the expected appraisal themes, and when this happened, the experience of emotion was stronger. The results for the positive emotions were more complex, but lend credence to the hypothesis that laughter and smiling are distinct. Smiling co-occurred with appraisals of pride, but never occurred with appraisals of anger. In contrast, laughter occurred more often with appraisals of anger, a finding consistent with recent evidence linking laughter to the dissociation or undoing of negative emotion.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1080/02699930341000149

Affiliations: 1: Columbia University, New York, USA 2: University of California, Berkeley, USA

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