Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-11381-8
Title: Older adults have difficulty decoding emotions from the eyes, whereas easterners have difficulty decoding emotion from the mouth
Authors: Low, Anna CY
Oh, Vincent YS
Tong, Eddie MW 
Scarf, Damian
Ruffman, Ted
Keywords: Science & Technology
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Science & Technology - Other Topics
FACIAL EXPRESSIONS
CULTURAL-DIFFERENCES
RECOGNITION
AGE
PATTERNS
IDENTIFICATION
JAPANESE
FACES
YOUNG
EAST
Issue Date: 6-May-2022
Publisher: NATURE PORTFOLIO
Citation: Low, Anna CY, Oh, Vincent YS, Tong, Eddie MW, Scarf, Damian, Ruffman, Ted (2022-05-06). Older adults have difficulty decoding emotions from the eyes, whereas easterners have difficulty decoding emotion from the mouth. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS 12 (1). ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-11381-8
Abstract: Older adults and Easterners have worse emotion recognition (than young adults and Westerners, respectively), but the question of why remains unanswered. Older adults look less at eyes, whereas Easterners look less at mouths, raising the possibility that compelling older adults to look at eyes, and Easterners to look at mouths, might improve recognition. We did this by comparing emotion recognition in 108 young adults and 109 older adults from New Zealand and Singapore in the (a) eyes on their own (b) mouth on its own or (c) full face. Older adults were worse than young adults on 4/6 emotions with the Eyes Only stimuli, but only 1/6 emotions with the Mouth Only stimuli. In contrast, Easterners were worse than Westerners on 6/6 emotions for Mouth Only and Full Face stimuli, but were equal on all six emotions for Eyes Only stimuli. These results provide a substantial leap forward because they point to the precise difficulty for older adults and Easterners. Older adults have more consistent difficulty identifying individual emotions in the eyes compared to the mouth, likely due to declining brain functioning, whereas Easterners have more consistent difficulty identifying emotions from the mouth than the eyes, likely due to inexperience inferring mouth information.
Source Title: SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/228596
ISSN: 2045-2322
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-11381-8
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