Abstract:
Adults and children can discriminate various emotional expressions, although
there is limited research on sensitivity to the differences between posed and genuine
expressions. Adults have shown implicit sensitivity to the difference between posed and
genuine happy smiles in that they evaluate T-shirts paired with genuine smiles more
favorably than T-shirts paired with posed smiles or neutral expressions (Peace, Miles, &
Johnston, 2006). Adults also have shown some explicit sensitivity to posed versus
genuine expressions; they are more likely to say that a model i?,feeling happy if the
expression is genuine than posed. Nonetheless they are duped by posed expressions about
50% of the time (Miles, & Johnston, in press). There has been no published study to date
in which researchers report whether children's evaluation of items varies with expression
and there is little research investigating children's sensitivity to the veracity of facial
expressions.
In the present study the same face stimuli were used as in two previous studies
(Miles & Johnston, in press; Peace et al., 2006). The first question to be addressed was
whether adults and 7-year-olds have a cognitive understanding of the differences between
posed and genuine happiness {scenario task). They evaluated the feelings of children who
expressed gratitude for a present that they did or did not want. Results indicated that all
participants had a fundamental understanding of the difference between real and posed
happiness. The second question involved adults' and children's implicit sensitivity to the
veracity of posed and genuine smiles. Participants rated and ranked beach balls paired
with faces showing posed smiles, genuine smiles, and neutral expressions. Adults ranked.but did not rate beach balls paired with genuine smiles more favorably than beach balls
paired with posed smiles. Children did not demonstrate implicit sensitivity as their ratings
and rankings of beach balls did not vary with expressions; they did not even rank beach
balls paired with genuine expressions higher than beach balls paired with neutral
expressions.
In the explicit (show/feel) task, faces were presented without the beach balls and
participants were first asked whether each face was showing happy and then whether
each face wasfeeling happy. There were also two matching trials that presented two faces
at once; participants had to indicate which person was actuallyfeeling happy. In the show
condition both adults and 7-year-olds were very accurate on genuine and neutral
expressions but made some errors on posed smiles. Adults were fooled about 50% of the
time by posed smiles in thefeel condition (i.e., they were likely to say that a model
posing happy was really feeling happy) and children were even less accurate, although
they showed weak sensitivity to posed versus genuine expressions. Future research
should test an older age group of children to determine when explicit sensitivity to posed
versus genuine facial expressions becomes adult-like and modify the ranking task to
explore the influence of facial expressions on object evaluations.