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Head movement differs for positive and negative emotions in video recordings of sitting individuals. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Individuals naturally tend to approach positive stimuli and avoid negative stimuli, with emotions influencing their level of activity versus inaction, categorized as approach/avoidance and freezing/activation.
  • The study aimed to investigate how emotions affect the spontaneous behavior of individuals while seated, using computer vision to track head movements during emotion manipulation across five studies with 932 participants.
  • Findings showed that participants leaned forward and moved more when exposed to positive stimuli compared to negative ones, yet no significant differences were observed in their behavior when comparing positive or negative stimuli to neutral conditions.

Article Abstract

Individuals tend to approach positive stimuli and avoid negative stimuli. Furthermore, emotions influence whether individuals freeze or move more. These two kinds of motivated behavior refer to the approach/avoidance behavior and behavioral freezing/activation. Previous studies examined (e.g., using forced platforms) whether individuals' behavior depends on stimulus' valence; however, the results were mixed. Thus, we aimed to test whether emotions' effects on spontaneous whole-body behavior of standing individuals also occur in the seated position. We used a computer vision method to measure the head sway in video recordings that offers ease of use, replicability, and unobtrusiveness for the seated research participant. We analyzed behavior recorded in the laboratory during emotion manipulations across five studies totaling 932 participants. We observed that individuals leaned more forward and moved more when watching positive stimuli than when watching negative stimuli. However, individuals did not behave differently when watching positive or negative stimuli than in the neutral condition. Our results indicate that head movements extracted from seated individuals' video recordings can be useful in detecting robust differences in emotional behavior (positive vs. negative emotions).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8016997PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86841-8DOI Listing

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