Title of article
The nonverbal environment of self-esteem: Interactive effects of facial-expression and eye-gaze on perceiversʹ self-evaluations
Author/Authors
Lamer، نويسنده , , Sarah Ariel and Reeves، نويسنده , , Stephanie L. and Weisbuch، نويسنده , , Max، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Pages
9
From page
130
To page
138
Abstract
Self-esteem fluctuates in response to verbal feedback and social exclusion, but such unambiguous feedback may not occur frequently enough to account for moment-to-moment self-esteem fluctuations. We propose that othersʹ facial behavior provides a frequently-encountered source of feedback to which self-esteem should respond. We expected repeated exposure to angry faces to reduce perceiversʹ self-esteem but only when those faces exhibited direct-gaze (“looked at” perceivers). Two studies supported this hypothesis. In Study 1, participants viewed a series of faces under the guise of a memory paradigm. Self-esteem was reduced among participants who viewed angry faces compared to participants who viewed neutral or happy faces. Crucially, this pattern only occurred in response to faces exhibiting direct-gaze. In Study 2, participants completed a word-identification task in which attention to faces was task-irrelevant. The results of this study replicated Study 1 but only to the extent faces captured participantsʹ attention during the priming task.
Keywords
emotion , Nonverbal behaviour , Face Perception , self-esteem , Sociometer , Self-concept
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2015
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1961760
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