Personality assimilation across species: enfacing an ape reduces own intelligence and increases emotion attribution to apes.

Psychol Res

Cognitive Psychology Unit, Institute for Psychological Research and Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, Leiden University, Wassenaarseweg 52, 2333 AK, Leiden, The Netherlands.

Published: March 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The enfacement effect occurs when people feel a sense of ownership over another person's face during synchronous face stroking or control of a virtual face.
  • Findings show that this effect extends even to non-human species, suggesting that individuals can identify with ape faces as if they were their own when there is synchrony.
  • This illusion of self-other overlap impacts cognitive and emotional processes, leading to decreased performance on intelligence tasks and a heightened willingness to attribute emotions to apes.

Article Abstract

Seeing another person's face while that face and one's own face are stroked synchronously or controlling a virtual face by moving one's own induces the illusion that the other face has become a part of oneself-the enfacement effect. Here, we demonstrate that humans can enface even members of another species and that this enfacement promotes "feature migration" in terms of intelligence and emotional attribution from the representation of other to the representation of oneself, and vice versa. We presented participants with a virtual human face moving in or out of sync with their own face, and then morphed it into an ape face. Participants tended to perceive the ape face as their own in the sync condition, as indicated by body-ownership and inclusion-of-others-in-the-self ratings. More interestingly, synchrony also reduced performance in a fluid-intelligence task and increased the willingness to attribute emotions to apes. These observations, which fully replicated in another experiment, fit with the idea that self and other are represented in terms of feature codes, just like non-social events (as implied by the Theory of Event Coding), so that representational self-other overlap invites illusory conjunctions of features from one representation to the other.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6433798PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00426-018-1048-xDOI Listing

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