3.9 Article

Differences in Emotion Recognition From Body and Face Cues Between Deaf and Hearing Individuals

Journal

MULTISENSORY RESEARCH
Volume 32, Issue 6, Pages 499-519

Publisher

BRILL ACADEMIC PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1163/22134808-20191353

Keywords

Deafness; emotion; bodies; facial expressions; auditory deprivation; sign language

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (PRIN 2015WXAXJF)
  2. Italian Ministry of Health (Ricerca Corrente 2017, IRCCS Mondino Foundation, Pavia)

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Deaf individuals may compensate for the lack of the auditory input by showing enhanced capacities in certain visual tasks. Here we assessed whether this also applies to recognition of emotions expressed by bodily and facial cues. In Experiment 1, we compared deaf participants and hearing controls in a task measuring recognition of the six basic emotions expressed by actors in a series of video-clips in which either the face, the body, or both the face and body were visible. In Experiment 2, we measured the weight of body and face cues in conveying emotional information when intense genuine emotions are expressed, a situation in which face expressions alone may have ambiguous valence. We found that deaf individuals were better at identifying disgust and fear from body cues (Experiment 1) and in integrating face and body cues in case of intense negative genuine emotions (Experiment 2). Our findings support the capacity of deaf individuals to compensate for the lack of the auditory input enhancing perceptual and attentional capacities in the spared modalities, showing that this capacity extends to the affective domain.

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