When it comes to emotions, Eastern and Western cultures see things very differently

Across two studies, participants viewed images, each of which consisted of one centre model and four background models in each image. The researchers manipulated the facial emotion (happy, angry, sad) in the centre or background models and asked the participants to determine the dominant emotion of the centre figure.

The majority of Japanese participants (72%) reported that their judgments of the centre person's emotions were influenced by the ... Full Story »

Posted by Leo Romero

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Julian Friedland
4.0
by Julian Friedland - Oct. 1, 2008

Brief but very interesting. Would support many other observations of opposing individualism and collectivism in these cultures.

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