Ansiedade social e atribuição de emoções a faces neutras

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Abstract

Previous research has revealed facial emotion recognition biases and distinctive patterns of brain activation in social anxiety disorder. We investigated the attribution of emotion to neutral facial displays in 22 subjects with social anxiety and 20 healthy controls. Using a forced choice paradigm, participants labeled neutral faces as happy, fearful, angry or sad. The most frequent emotional labels attributed by males and females to neutral faces were anger and sadness, respectively. These findings are discussed according to the notion that the attribution of anger by men may be associated with the male tendency to detect hostile environmental signs, whereas the increased attribution of sadness by females might be associated with facilitated identification of negative affect. The results suggest that social anxiety disorder differentially affects males and females and has important implications concerning the use of the neutral face as a baseline or control condition in behavioral neuroscience.

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APA

Alves, N. T., Rodrigues, M. R., Souza, I. B. M. B., & Sousa, J. P. M. (2012). Ansiedade social e atribuição de emoções a faces neutras. Estudos de Psicologia, 17(1), 129–134. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1413-294X2012000100016

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