Frontiers in Psychology (Mar 2015)

Angry facial expressions bias gender categorization in children and adults: behavioral and computational evidence

  • Laurie eBayet,
  • Laurie eBayet,
  • Olivier ePascalis,
  • Olivier ePascalis,
  • Paul C. Quinn,
  • Kang eLee,
  • Edouard eGentaz,
  • Edouard eGentaz,
  • Edouard eGentaz,
  • James W. Tanaka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00346
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Angry faces are perceived as more masculine by adults. However, the developmental course and underlying mechanism (bottom-up stimulus driven or top-down belief driven) associated with the angry-male bias remain unclear. Here we report that anger biases face gender categorization towards male responding in children as young as 5-6 years. The bias is observed for both own- and other-race faces, and is remarkably unchanged across development (into adulthood) as revealed by signal detection analyses (Experiments 1-2). The developmental course of the angry-male bias, along with its extension to other-race faces, combine to suggest that it is not rooted in extensive experience, e.g. observing males engaging in aggressive acts during the school years. Based on several computational simulations of gender categorization (Experiment 3), we further conclude that (1) the angry-male bias results, at least partially, from a strategy of attending to facial features or their second-order relations when categorizing face gender, and (2) any single choice of computational representation (e.g., Principal Component Analysis) is insufficient to assess resemblances between face categories, as different representations of the very same faces suggest different bases for the angry-male bias. Our findings are thus consistent with stimulus-and stereotyped-belief driven accounts of the angry-male bias. Taken together, the evidence suggests considerable stability in the interaction between some facial dimensions in social categorization that is present prior to the onset of formal schooling.

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