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Social-emotional experiences and cultural influences play significant roles in shaping gender development. During middle childhood, from ages 6 to 11, peer groups become dominant in reinforcing gender norms. Children in this age group often align with same-gender peer groups, which actively encourage behaviors that conform to traditional gender roles. For instance, boys may be discouraged from engaging in activities perceived as feminine, reinforcing culturally dictated norms about masculinity...
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Updated: Apr 15, 2026

Eye Tracking During Visually Situated Language Comprehension: Flexibility and Limitations in Uncovering Visual Context Effects
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Grounding context in face processing: color, emotion, and gender.

Sandrine Gil1, Ludovic Le Bigot1

  • 1University of Poitiers and CNRS (UMR 7295 - Centre de Recherches sur la Cognition et l'Apprentissage), Poitiers France.

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|April 9, 2015
PubMed
Summary

Red backgrounds bias face perception negatively compared to green, influencing how we interpret emotions. This color effect on facial expression processing is modulated by poser gender and emotion type for male posers.

Keywords:
coloremotionfacial expressiongenderimplicit affective processing

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Social Psychology

Background:

  • Affective context influences target perception.
  • Color and gender are known to carry affective valence.
  • Facial expressions are crucial for human interaction.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the impact of colored backgrounds on facial expression processing.
  • To determine if the valenced-color effect is modulated by the gender of the face poser and the perceiver.
  • To explore the common valence dimension shared by color and gender.

Main Methods:

  • Participants categorized ambiguous facial expressions (neutral, surprise) presented on red, green, mixed, or achromatic backgrounds.
  • Posers were either female or male.
  • Subjective ratings of background colors were collected using semantic differential scales.

Main Results:

  • Red backgrounds led to more negative face perception than green backgrounds, irrespective of the poser's gender.
  • For female posers, only the background color affected perception.
  • For male posers, perception was modulated by background color, emotion ambiguity, and perceiver gender.

Conclusions:

  • Color valence significantly impacts facial expression perception.
  • Gender acts as a modulator in the color-emotion perception interaction, particularly for male posers.
  • Color and gender share a common underlying valence-based dimension influencing social perception.