Abstract
Happy faces involve appearance changes in the mouth (the smile) and eye region (e.g., narrowing of the eye opening). The present experiments investigated whether the recognition of happy faces is achieved on the basis of the smile alone or whether information in the eye region is also used. A go/no-go task was used in which participants responded to happy faces and withhold a response to nonhappy distractors. The presence/absence of the expressive cues in the eyes did not affect recognition accuracy but reaction times were slightly longer for smiles without expressive cues in the eyes. This delay was not obtained when the top and the bottom halves of the faces were misaligned, or when the distractor was changed from a top-dominant to a bottom-dominant facial expression (i.e., from anger to disgust). Together, these results suggest that the eyes may have a modest effect on speeded recognition of happy faces although the presence of this effect may depend on task context.
We thank Leena Landström for her help in data collection. We also thank Paul Ekman for his permission to use the manipulated Ekman and Friesen (1976) pictures. JML was supported by the Academy of Finland and Finnish Cultural Foundation.
Notes
1An alternative possibility for the differences in results of Experiment 4 and those of Experiments 1–3 is that the participants were mostly female in Experiment 4, whereas both male and female participants were tested in Experiments 1–3. We consider this possibility unlikely, however, because our analyses indicated that, in Experiments 1–3, gender of the participants did not affect the pattern of RTs to smiles with eye markers and smiles without eye markers.