2019
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/3vqsj
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Cinematographic high-contrast lighting can facilitate empathic affective mimicry

Abstract: Can cinematographic lightning techniques be used to affect film viewers’ empathic reactions? We investigated the effect of high- and low-contrast lightning on affective empathy towards depicted actors. Fourty one participants watched short clips of professional actors expressing happiness, anger and disgust and rated the valence and intensity of their own and actors’ emotional states. The extent of facial mimicry of actors’ emotional facial expressions, quantified via electromyographic activation of expression… Show more

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“…Manipulation check analyses reported in Voodla, et al (2020, forthcoming) revealed that the facial muscle showing the strongest activity to displays of disgust was zygomaticus rather than the levator, which suggested that we did not observe facial mimicry of disgust. We therefore excluded disgust clips from further analysis since we cannot test familiarity and likeability effects on facial mimicry without a valid mimicry signal.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Manipulation check analyses reported in Voodla, et al (2020, forthcoming) revealed that the facial muscle showing the strongest activity to displays of disgust was zygomaticus rather than the levator, which suggested that we did not observe facial mimicry of disgust. We therefore excluded disgust clips from further analysis since we cannot test familiarity and likeability effects on facial mimicry without a valid mimicry signal.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 67%