When you smile, the world smiles at you: ERP evidence for self-expression effects on face processing

Alex Sel, Beatriz Calvo-Merino, Simone Tuettenberg, Bettina Forster

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Abstract

Current models of emotion simulation propose that intentionally posing a facial expression can change one’s subjective feelings, which in turn influences the processing of visual input. However, the underlying neural mechanism whereby one’s facial emotion modulates the visual cortical responses to other’s facial expressions remains unknown. To understand how one’s facial expression affects visual processing we measured participants’ visual evoked potentials (VEPs) during a facial emotion judgment task of positive and neutral faces. To control for the effects of facial muscles on VEPs, we asked participants to smile (adopting an expression of happiness), to purse their lips (incompatible with smiling) or to pose with a neutral face, in separate blocks. Results showed that the smiling expression modulates face-specific visual processing components (N170/vertex positive potential) to watching other facial expressions. Specifically, when making a happy expression, neutral faces are processed similarly to happy faces. When making a neutral expression or pursing the lips, however, responses to neutral and happy face are significantly different. This effect was source localized within multisensory associative areas, angular gyrus, associative visual cortex, and somatosensory cortex. We provide novel evidence that one’s own emotional expression acts as a top-down influence modulating low-level neural encoding during facial perception.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1316-1322
Number of pages7
JournalSocial Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
Volume10
Issue number10
Early online date24 Feb 2015
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2015

Keywords

  • face processing
  • emotional embodiment
  • facial feedback
  • VEPs
  • N170

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