Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
920187 | Acta Psychologica | 2011 | 6 Pages |
Using a dual-task methodology we examined the interaction of perceiving and producing facial expressions. In one task, participants were asked to produce a smile or a frown (Task 2) in response to a tone stimulus. This auditory-facial task was embedded in a dual-task context, where the other task (Task 1) required a manual response to visual face stimuli (visual-manual task). These face stimuli showed facial expressions that were either compatible or incompatible to the to-be-produced facial expression. Both reaction times and error rates (measured by facial electromyography) revealed a robust stimulus–response compatibility effect across tasks, suggesting that perceived social actions automatically activate corresponding actions even if perceived and produced actions belong to different tasks. The dual-task nature of this compatibility effect further testifies that encoding of facial expressions is highly automatic.
Research highlights► Cross-task compatibility of facial expressions in a dual task paradigm ► Action–perception interaction in a socially relevant domain ► Muscle onset latency, measured by facial electromyography (EMG) as reaction times ► Cognitive mechanisms of common coding of perception and action ► Relevance to the human mirror neuron system