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Embodiment theories link physical actions to psychological states. This study found that while emotions in faces didn't affect step initiation times, angry female faces unexpectedly slowed responses, suggesting a Stroop-like effect in postural behavior.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Embodied Cognition
  • Social Neuroscience

Background:

  • Embodiment theories propose sensory-motor processes influence psychological states, including social information processing.
  • Understanding the interplay between bodily states and social cues is crucial for comprehending human interaction.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the coupling between whole-body postural behaviors and social affective cues (smiling/angry faces).
  • To examine if task-irrelevant emotional information influences motor responses in a social context.

Main Methods:

  • A Simon-like paradigm was employed with healthy female volunteers.
  • Participants initiated forward or backward steps on a force plate based on the poser's gender, ignoring facial emotion.
  • Spatiotemporal analysis of the body center of pressure during stepping was conducted.

Main Results:

  • No affective Simon effect was observed; task-irrelevant emotion did not alter step initiation times.
  • A Stroop-like effect emerged: steps were initiated slower in response to angry female faces.
  • This indicates that postural behavior can be modulated by stimulus feature congruity.

Conclusions:

  • Postural behavior is sensitive to stimulus congruity, even when emotion is task-irrelevant.
  • The findings support embodied cognition by demonstrating a link between social perception and motor control.
  • Unexpected emotional congruity effects highlight the automatic processing of social affective information.