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DOI: 10.1177/1948550611418534
OpenAccess: Closed
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Veiled Emotions

Agneta H. Fischer,Marleen Gillebaart,Mark Rotteveel,Daniela Becker,Michael Vliek

Psychology
Happiness
Shame
2011
The present study explores the relative absence of expressive cues and the effect of contextual cues on the perception of emotions and its effect on attitudes. The visibility of expressive cues was manipulated by showing films displaying female targets whose faces were either fully visible, covered by a niqab, or partially visible (control condition). Targets expressed anger, shame, and happiness in the three different face conditions. Results show that perception of emotions is mainly affected by an absence of expressive cues: Covering the lower part of the face results in the perception of less happiness in happy videos and of more intense negative emotions in both happy and shame videos. This bias toward the perception of more negative emotions in covered faces mediates a negative attitude toward niqabs.
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    Veiled Emotions” is a paper by Agneta H. Fischer Marleen Gillebaart Mark Rotteveel Daniela Becker Michael Vliek published in 2011. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.