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首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Psychology >Implications for Emotion: Using Anatomically Based Facial Coding to Compare Emoji Faces Across Platforms
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Implications for Emotion: Using Anatomically Based Facial Coding to Compare Emoji Faces Across Platforms

机译:对情感的影响:使用讽刺基础的面部编码来比较跨平台的Emoji面

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Emoji faces, which are ubiquitous in our everyday communication, are thought to resemble human faces and aid emotional communication. Yet, few studies examine whether emojis are perceived as a particular emotion and whether that perception changes based on rendering differences across electronic platforms. The current paper draws upon emotion theory to evaluate whether emoji faces depict anatomical differences that are proposed to differentiate human depictions of emotion (hereafter, “facial expressions”). We modified the existing Facial Action Coding System (FACS) ( Ekman and Rosenberg, 1997 ) to apply to emoji faces. An equivalent “emoji FACS” rubric allowed us to evaluate two important questions: First, Anatomically, does the same emoji face “look” the same across platforms and versions? Second, Do emoji faces perceived as a particular emotion category resemble the proposed human facial expression for that emotion? To answer these questions, we compared the anatomically based codes for 31 emoji faces across three platforms and two version updates. We then compared those codes to the proposed human facial expression prototype for the emotion perceived within the emoji face. Overall, emoji faces across platforms and versions were not anatomically equivalent. Moreover, the majority of emoji faces did not conform to human facial expressions for an emotion, although the basic anatomical codes were shared among human and emoji faces. Some emotion categories were better predicted by the assortment of anatomical codes than others, with some individual differences among platforms. We discuss theories of emotion that help explain how emoji faces are perceived as an emotion, even when anatomical differences are not always consistent or specific to an emotion.
机译:在我们日常沟通中普遍存在的表情符号面临,被认为类似于人类的面孔和援助情绪交流。然而,很少有研究检查表情符号是否被视为特定的情感以及这种感知是否根据电子平台呈现差异而变化。目前的论文吸引了情绪理论,评估表情符号是否描绘了提出的解剖学差异,提出了区分人类描绘的情感(以下,“面部表情”)。我们修改了现有的面部动作编码系统(FACS)(EKMAN和ROPENBERG,1997)申请表情符号面。相同的“表情符号Facs”量规则允许我们评估两个重要问题:首先,解剖学上,跨平台和版本相同的表情符号面对“看”吗?其次,作为特定情感类的表情符号脸部是否类似于这种情绪的拟议人类面部表情?要回答这些问题,我们将基于散对基础的代码与三个平台和两个版本更新进行了比较了31个表情符号面部。然后,我们将这些代码与所提出的人类表达原型进行比较,以便在表达式中的情绪。总体而言,跨平台和版本的表情符号面临不是解剖相当的。此外,大多数表情群岛面孔并不符合人类面部表情的情感,尽管基本解剖码在人类和表情符号面临中共用。各种各样的解剖代码更好地预测了一些情感类别,平台之间的一些个体差异。我们讨论情感的理论,帮助解释表情症如何被认为是一种情绪,即使解剖学差异并不总是一致或特定于情绪。

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