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Original Articles

Identification of emotional expressiveness in facial photographs over 36 h of extended vigilance in healthy young men—a preliminary study

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Pages 339-348 | Received 09 Mar 2015, Accepted 15 Nov 2015, Published online: 21 Dec 2015
 

ABSTRACT

Changes in sleep patterns negatively influence some emotional responses, but their effects on facial expressiveness identification are unclear. To investigate these effects, 21 young, healthy, male volunteers of intermediate chronotype evaluated emotional expressiveness of faces depicting 6 basic emotions in 5 emotional gradients every 4 h over 36 h of continuous wakefulness. To measure attention and mood we used the Psychomotor Vigilance test and the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule Expanded, respectively. We found effects of emotional gradient for all types of emotions (100% > 80% > 60% > 40% > 20%) during all tested periods, with no indications of circadian effects. The only emotional rating to be affected was disgust, which was progressively blunted throughout the experiment. This effect did not parallel homeostatic and circadian changes in mood, alertness or attention. We conclude that identifying disgust on facial photographs is particularly sensitive to lack of sleep irrespective of sleep-induced changes in mood and attention in males.

Additional information

Funding

Juçara X. Zaparoli, Valdir Lemos and Daniel Utsumi for assistance in organizing/collecting the data. This Project was financed by AFIP, FAPESP [grant 2011/01286-0], CAPES and CNPq, all non-profit organizations that sponsor research in Brazil.

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