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Aging and the Effects of Facial and Prosodic Cues on Emotional Intensity Ratings and Memory Reconstructions
Authors:Laura A. Thompson  Mohammad R. Aidinejad  Janisse Ponte
Affiliation:(1) Psychology Dept. (3452), New Mexico State University, Box 30001, Las Cruces, NM, 88003;(2) New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM, 88003
Abstract:Young (M = 23 years) and older (M = 77 years) adults' interpretation and memory for the emotional content of spoken discourse was examined in an experiment using short, videotaped scenes of two young actresses talking to each other about emotionally-laden events. Emotional nonverbal information (prosody or facial expressions) was conveyed at the end of each scene at low, medium, and high intensities. Nonverbal information indicating anger, happiness, or fear, conflicted with the verbal information. Older adults' ability to differentiate levels of emotional intensity was not as strong (for happiness and anger) compared to younger adults. An incidental memory task revealed that older adults, more often than younger adults, reconstruct what people state verbally to coincide with the meaning of the nonverbal content, if the nonverbal content is conveyed through facial expressions. A second experiment with older participants showed that the high level of memory reconstructions favoring the nonverbal interpretation was maintained when the ages of the participants and actresses were matched, and when the nonverbal content was conveyed both through prosody and facial expressions.
Keywords:facial expressions of emotion  prosodic cues to emotion  emotion and aging  memory for emotional language
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