i-Perception (Jun 2022)

Mask wearing affects emotion perception

  • Carmel A. Levitan,
  • Isabelle Rusk,
  • Danielle Jonas-Delson,
  • Hanyun Lou,
  • Lennon Kuzniar,
  • Gray Davidson,
  • Aleksandra Sherman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695221107391
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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To reduce the spread of COVID-19, mask wearing has become ubiquitous in much of the world. We studied the extent to which masks impair emotion recognition and dampen the perceived intensity of facial expressions by naturalistically inducing positive, neutral, and negative emotions in individuals while they were masked and unmasked. Two groups of online participants rated the emotional intensity of each presented image. One group rated full faces (N=104); the other (N=102) rated cropped images where only the upper face was visible. We found that masks impaired the recognition of and rated intensity of positive emotions. This happened even when the faces were cropped and the lower part of the face was not visible. Masks may thus reduce positive emotion and/or expressivity of positive emotion. However, perception of negativity was unaffected by masking, perhaps because unlike positive emotions like happiness which are signaled more in the mouth, negative emotions like anger rely more on the upper face.