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  1. Not Only Top-Down: The Dual-Processing of Gender-Emotion Stereotypes.Wen-Long Zhu, Ping Fang, Hui-lin Xing, Yan Ma & Mei-lin Yao - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Is gender-emotion stereotype a “one-hundred percent” top-down processing phenomenon, or are there additional contributions to cognitive processing from background clues when they are related to stereotypes? In the present study, we measured the gender-emotion stereotypes of 57 undergraduates with a face recall task and found that, regardless of whether the emotional expressions of distractors were congruent or incongruent with targets, people tended to misperceive the fearful faces of men as angry and the angry faces of women as fearful. In particular, (...)
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  • He must be mad; she might be sad: perceptual and decisional aspects of emotion recognition in ambiguous faces.Amandine Guillin, Laurence Chaby & Dorine Vergilino-Perez - 2023 - Cognition and Emotion 37 (8):1376-1385.
    While the recognition of ambiguous emotions is crucial for successful social interactions, previous work has shown that they are perceived differently depending on whether they are viewed on male or female faces. The present paper aims to shed light on this phenomenon by exploring two hypotheses: the confounded signal hypothesis, which posits the existence of perceptual overlaps between emotions and gendered morphotypes, and the social role hypothesis, according to which the observer's responses are biased by stereotypes. Participants were asked to (...)
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  • Perceiving emotion and sex from the body: evidence from the Garner task for independent processes.Marco Gandolfo & Paul E. Downing - 2019 - Cognition and Emotion 34 (3):427-437.
    The appearance of the body signals socially relevant states and traits, but the how these cues are perceived is not well understood. Here we examined judgments of emotion and sex from the body’s ap...
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