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May 2024

Development of procedures for rating posed emotional expressions across facial, prosodic, and lexical channels

Author(s): Borod, J. C., Madigan, N., Tabert, M. H., Schmidt, J. M.

Journal/Book: Percept Mot Skills. 1999; 89: PO Box 9229, Missoula, MT 59807, USA. Perceptual Motor Skills. 57-71.

Abstract: A number of rating systems are available to evaluate emotional communication in a single modality. The main purpose of this study was to develop procedures to train human raters to evaluate posed expressions of emotion across three different channels of communication, i.e., facial, prosodic/intonational, and lexical/verbal. These procedures were used to evaluate posed emotional expressions produced by individuals with unilateral brain lesions from stroke. Posers in this preliminary report were two right brain-damaged, two left brain-damaged, and two normal control right-handed adults who were matched on demographic and neurological factors. Eight emotional expressions, both positive and negative, were produced in three channels and rated for intensity, pleasantness, and category accuracy. 15 normal adults served as raters, five per channel. The rating procedures were comparable across channels, with analogous properties, and yielded substantial interrater agree ment. In this small sample of posers, it was observed that the expressions of the right brain-damaged group were rated as the least accurate and those of the left brain-damaged group as the most intense. When patterns of individual performance across the channels were examined, performance was quiet consistent for the normal controls yet variable for the right brain-damaged persons. These observations are in keeping with the notion that patients with right hemisphere pathology have difficulty in emotional communication. In summary, these findings suggest that comparison of emotional expressions across multiple channels is feasible.

Note: Article Borod JC, CUNY Queens Coll, Dept Psychol, NSB-E318, 65-30 Kissena Blvd, Flushing,NY 11367 USA

Keyword(s): BRAIN-DAMAGED PATIENTS; CHIMERIC FACES; PERCEPTION; COMMUNICATION; ASYMMETRY; PERCEIVER


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