作者
Nicholas A. Coles,David S. March,Fernando Marmolejo‐Ramos,Jeff T. Larsen,Nwadiogo Chisom Arinze,Izuchukwu L. G. Ndukaihe,Megan L. Willis,Francesco Foroni,Niv Reggev,Aviv Mokady,Patrick S. Forscher,John F. Hunter,Gwenaël Kaminski,Elif Yüvrük,Aycan Kapucu,Tamás Nagy,Nándor Hajdú,Julián Tejada,Raquel Meister Ko. Freitag,Danilo Zambrano,Bidisha Som,Balázs Aczél,Krystian Barzykowski,Sylwia Adamus,Katarzyna Filip,Yuki Yamada,Ayumi Ikeda,Daniel L. Eaves,Carmel Levitan,Sydney Leiweke,Michał Parzuchowski,Natalie Butcher,Gerit Pfuhl,Dana Basnight-Brown,José Antonio Hinojosa,Pedro R. Montoro,Lady Grey Javela,Kévin Vezirian,Hans IJzerman,Natalia Trujillo,Sarah D. Pressman,Pascal Gygax,Asil Ali Özdoğru,Susana Ruiz Fernández,Phoebe C. Ellsworth,Lowell Gaertner,Fritz Strack,Marco Marozzi,Marco Tullio Liuzza
摘要
Following theories of emotional embodiment, the facial feedback hypothesis suggests that individuals' subjective experiences of emotion are influenced by their facial expressions. However, evidence for this hypothesis has been mixed. We thus formed a global adversarial collaboration and carried out a preregistered, multicentre study designed to specify and test the conditions that should most reliably produce facial feedback effects. Data from n = 3,878 participants spanning 19 countries indicated that a facial mimicry and voluntary facial action task could both amplify and initiate feelings of happiness. However, evidence of facial feedback effects was less conclusive when facial feedback was manipulated unobtrusively via a pen-in-mouth task. In this Stage 2 Registered Report, Coles et al. present the results of a multicentre global adversarial collaboration on the facial feedback hypothesis.