AI Article Synopsis

  • * Their analysis revealed that only 13% of instances showed a reliable co-occurrence between the conscious experience of an emotion and the corresponding facial expression, even rising to 23% when partial facial signals were considered.
  • * Witkower et al.'s defense of Basic Emotion Theory was dismissed by the authors, who argue that their findings represent a significant challenge to the theory, highlighting a misunderstanding in correlating emotional expressions and experiences with different psychological phenomena.

Article Abstract

Replies to the comments made by Witkower, et al. (see record 2023-63008-004) on the current authors original article (see record 2022-03375-001). A core assumption of Basic Emotion Theory is that the conscious experience of a basic emotion co-occurs with a facial expression signal of that same emotion. Our analysis of available evidence found co-occurrence in only 13% of cases-thus calling into question basic and applied studies in which the emotion is inferred from the face. Our second analysis counted as a co-occurrence even when only part of the facial signal was observed. Co-occurrence was found in only 23% of cases. Witkower et al.'s rebuttal failed to undermine these important findings. They claimed that similar degrees of correlation are found in other areas of psychology, but they confuse co-occurrence of two intrinsic manifestations of the same event (expression and experience of emotion) with the correlation between one potential causal antecedent and an observed event (e.g., effects of meditation on anxiety). Our results stand as a major challenge to Basic Emotion Theory. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/emo0001227DOI Listing

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