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Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

1979, Vol. 37, No. 9, 1519-1531

The Role of Facial Response in the Experience of Emotion


Roger Tourangeau and Phoebe C. Ellsworth
Yale University

Facial expression and emotional stimuli were varied orthogonally in a 3 X 4


factorial design in order to test whether facial expression is necessary or suffi-
cient to influence emotional experience. Subjects watched a film eliciting fear,
sadness, or no emotion, while holding their facial muscles in the position char-
acteristic of fear or sadness, or in an effortful but nonemotional grimace; those
in a fourth group received no facial instructions. The subjects believed that the
study concerned subliminal perception and that the facial positions were neces-
sary to prevent physiological recording artifacts. The films had powerful effects
on reported emotions, the facial expressions none. Correlations between facial
expression and reported emotion were zero. Sad and fearful subjects showed
distinctive patterns of physiological arousal. Facial expression also tended to
affect physiological responses in a manner consistent with an effort hypothesis.

Half a century ago, Cannon's decisive cri- emotions but only to the intensity of general
tique of the James-Lange theory ended scien- emotional arousal and perhaps (Duffy, 1962)
tific consideration of the hypothesis that to a global, primitive approach-avoidance
peripheral responses provide the basis for tendency. These theories have little to say
qualitative distinctions among emotions. Non- about qualitative distinctions among the emo-
specific arousal theories have dominated the tions. They tend to share, implicitly or ex-
study of emotion ever since (Duffy, 1934, plicitly, the assumption that such distinctions
1962; Lindsley, 1951). The James-Lange are the product of learning. The theory of
theory (James, 1890; Lange, 1885/1922) Schachter and Singer (1962), for example,
proposed that emotional stimuli elicit physio- asserts that undifferentiated arousal is classi-
logical responses specific to each emotion; the fied according to situational cues to determine
experience of an emotion, according to their the emotional experience. Qualitative distinc-
view, is the perception of the corresponding tions derive from the classification; the classi-
physiological pattern. 1 By contrast, the non- fication presumably derives from social learn-
specific arousal theorists argue that physio- ing (see also Duffy, 1962).
logical patterns do not correspond to specific The learning position of the arousal theo-
rists is cast into some doubt by recent evi-
dence for the widespread cross-cultural gen-
The research reported here was funded by Na-
tional Science Foundation Grant BNS-7S-22890
1
awarded to the second author. We are grateful for The theories proposed by James and by Langc
the assistance of Sidney Don and Steven Ganahl, who differ in that Lange's theory was restricted to auto-
served as experimenters; Michael Brownstein, Bar- nomic feedback (heart rate, stomach contractions,
bara Fleming, Kathy Gould, and Jane Schweitzer, blushes, etc.), whereas that of James also included
who assisted with scoring the data; Paul Ekman, muscular feedback (such as changes in tonus, posture
Wallace V. Friescn, Alison Webb, Adclle Wenning, and, presumably, facial expression). Most subsequent
Nancy Wilncr, and the Yale Audio-Visual Center, writers, including the major critics, attributed the
who helped us find, pretest, and edit the films; and visceral version to both authors indiscriminately; in
Robert Novelly, who advised us on appropriate using the term "James-Lange theory" we will follow
physiological measures. in this tradition, while recognizing that the muscular
Requests for reprints should be sent to Roger components of the James theory were not fully dis-
Tourangeau, Department of Psychology, Connecticut credited by Cannon's research, and have much in
College, New London, Connecticut 06.320. common with the later facial feedback hypotheses.

Copyright 1979 by the American Psychological Association, Inc. 0022-3514/79/3709-151M00.75

1519
1520 ROGER TOURANGEAU AND PHOEBE C. ELLSWORTH

erality of a small set of basic emotion & Moss, 1963; Lindsley, 1951). In addition,
categories, reliably used in labeling facial ex- Hohmann (1966) has found, contrary to Can-
pressions of emotion (Ekman, Sorenson, & non's (1927) contention, that separation of
Friesen, 1969; Ekman & Friesen, 1971; Izarcl, the viscera from the central nervous system
1971). If emotion categories are learned, cul- (due to spinal lesions) in humans is associated
tural phenomena, why should all cultures with reduced emotional responding. Finally,
studied so far share the same small set? In there is Schachter and Singer's (1962) dem-
line with the evidence on the cross-cultural onstration that induced autonomic arousal can
generality of the recognition of facial expres- lead to various types of emotional (and un-
sions, some theorists (Tomkins, 1962; Izard, emotional) response (see also Schachter &
1971, 1977) have proposed that feedback Wheeler, 1962; Zillman & Bryant, 1974). 2
from the facial muscles is important in the On the other hand, some of the better studies
subjective experience of emotion. In the of emotional arousal have found evidence that
strongest version of these facial feedback different emotions are associated with different
theories, facial responses play the same crit- autonomic patterns (Ax, 1953; Funkenstein,
ical role as more general visceral and muscular 1955; Wolf & Wolff, 1947). Hohmann's find-
changes play in the James-Lange theory: the ings on patients with spinal lesions invite
proprioception of the facial response is the numerous interpretations. Schachter and
experience of emotion. This shift in emphasis Singer's results do not always replicate (sec
from visceral to facial feedback neutralizes Marshall & Zimbardo, 1979; Maslach, 1979),
most of Cannon's criticisms of the James- and even in their original experiment the
Lange theory. Cannon (1927), for example, differences between subjects given situa-
argued that visceral responses were too slow tional cues for euphoria and those given cues
and too undifferentiated to be the basis of for anger were negligible. Finally, Cannon's
the subjective experience; facial expressions arguments on the long latencies of visceral
are sufficiently immediate and sufficiently responses still pose difficulties for any theory
various; similarly, Cannon's demonstrations that makes the sensation of autonomic arousal
of "emotional" behavior in animals whose a necessary condition for emotional experi-
viscera were separated from their central ence.
nervous systems are irrelevant to the facial The strongest evidence for the facial feed-
theories. back view comes from studies by Laird
Although they differ on the causal priority (1974) and Lanzetta, Cartwright-Smith, and
assigned to each, these various positions pre- Kleck (1976). Laird showed effects for manip-
dict that in general self-report, facial, and ulated facial expression on felt aggressive-
physiological measures of emotion should be ness, and Lanzetta et al. showed similar ef-
positively correlated. In contrast, still another fects on pain. The facial feedback theorists,
position predicts a negative correlation among however, cannot explain the results of
these measures. This cathartic-hydraulic view Schachter and Singer's experiment (but see
was proposed first by James (1890); its chief comments by Izard, 1977, chapter 2). In
exponent, however, is Freud (1946/1921). addition, the Laird study did not contain the
According to the hydraulic view, verbal, fa- control group necessary to determine whether
cial, and physiological responses are alterna- the appropriate expression increases the re-
tive channels for releasing the emotional en- sponse to a stimulus or the inappropriate ex-
ergy evoked by a stimulus; if one channel is pression inhibits the response (or both). Laird
blocked, the response through the others also used self-report measures in a within-
should increase in intensity.
What is the evidence for the various views?
2
The general arousal models receive a certain Since the physiological measures in Schachter
amount of indirect support from the numerous and Singer were extremely crude, we cannot be en-
tirely confident that the physiological patterns were
failures to find clear patterns corresponding identical. It is quite possible that the situational cues
to different emotions (Lacey, Kagan, Lacey, modified the physiological response.
FACIAL RESPONSE AND EMOTION 1521

subjects design, leaving open the possibility In the second place, neither author is en-
that demand characteristics were responsible tirely static in defining the implications of his
for the results. Lanzetta et al. (1976) also general statements about the importance of
used a within-subjects design, but their inclu- the face. Our experiment was designed to test
sion of a galvanic skin response (GSR) mea- (a) whether the appropriate facial expression
sure makes an account in terms of demand is necessary for the subjective experience of
characteristics less plausible. However, since the emotion, and (b) whether the voluntary
pain is not typically included in theories of assumption of an expression is sufficient to
emotion, their findings may not generalize to produce the experience. If facial expression is
the feeling states that are. necessary for emotional experience, there
The best evidence for the hydraulic view should be no emotion unless the face responds.
comes from studies showing a negative corre- Even in the presence of emotional stimuli,
lation between facial expressiveness and mea- without the appropriate emotional expression,
sures of physiological arousal (Buck, Miller, no emotion should be felt. If the facial ex-
& Caul, 1974; Buck, Savin, Miller, & Caul, pression is sufficient for emotional experience,
1972; Lanzetta & Kleck, 1970). This evidence when the face responds, the emotion should
tends to disconfirm the other theories. How- follow. Even in the absence of emotional stim-
ever, few of the studies cited in support for uli, an emotional facial expression should pro-
this view actually show the negative correla- duce an emotional feeling. Weaker forms of
tion expected to hold within a given individ- the hypotheses predict that feedback from the
ual. Instead, they find evidence that the most face should have a significant main effect on
expressive people are not the most physiolog- the emotional experience, attenuating or in-
ically aroused; they do not find that the same tensifying it. These hypotheses are derived
individual is more expressive when he is less from some of the more strongly worded state-
aroused. In addition, several studies (includ- ments of Tomkins (1962) and Izard ( 1 9 7 7 ) ,
ing Lanzetta et al., 1976) have found signif- statements that are qualified in other parts of
icant positive correlations. their work. Both theorists argue that adults
Thus none of the evidence is decisive, and may have learned to duplicate the effects of
most of the questions about the roles and rela- proprioceptive feedback by means of a re-
tive importance of the various components of afferent loop from the subcortical centers di-
emotional responding remain open. This study rectly to the cortex, rather than from the sub-
attempts to answer some of these questions by cortical centers to the face to the cortex, so
testing several predictions from the facial that actual movement of the face is not al-
feedback hypothesis. What we are calling the ways necessary. Similarly, they have argued
"facial feedback hypothesis" obviously de- that voluntary movement of the facial mus-
rives from the theories of Tomkins (1962), cles may not be sufficient to produce the cor-
who was the first to claim that the emotions responding emotion, because it does not create
are primarily facial behaviors, and later Izard, exactly the same proprioceptive cues as the
who maintains that "awareness of facial activ- involuntary movement created by a "real"
ity or facial feedback is actually our awareness emotional stimulus.
of the subjective experience of a specific emo- Although the theories allow for the pos-
tion" (1977, p. 60). Nonetheless the general sibility that neither the necessity nor the
hypothesis we are testing here is not the same sufficiency hypothesis is true, we believe that
as that of either of these theorists. In the first these hypotheses are worth testing. In the first
place, both theories are comprehensive state- place, the practical, therapeutic implications
ments containing numerous propositions of the theory are much greater if the facial
about the relationship of emotions to person- muscles are actually involved in the experi-
ality, motivation, communication, and each ence. If the face were necessary for emotional
other. The facial feedback hypothesis involves experience, victims of accidents, disease, or
just one of these propositions, albeit a central surgery resulting in facial paralysis or sensory
one. impairment would be expected to show corre-
1522 ROGER TOURANGEAU AND PHOEBE C. ELLSWORTH

spending affective deficiencies, and additional respiration rate were recorded, and the placement of
therapeutic attention would be indicated. If additional fake electrodes on their faces provided a
rationale for asking them to hold their facial muscles
the face were sufficient to influence the felt in a constant position during the film. These positions
emotion, it would be useful to teach patients corresponded to a fearful expression, a sad expression,
suffering from affective disorders how to con- or a grimace unrelated to any emotion. A final group
trol their facial expressions. Tn the second of subjects watched one of the three films but re-
ceived no facial instructions. During the film the
place, the qualifications render the theory subjects' faces were videotaped, and as soon as it was
much less testable. If the only influential over the subjects rated their emotional experience.
facial expression is one that results from an The design was thus a 3 X 4 factorial with three
involuntary natural response and if the facial films (fear, sad, and neutral) and four facial expres-
muscles can be bypassed intracranially, the sions (fear, sad, neutral, no instructions).
causal role of the face becomes inaccessible to
any sort of definitive empirical test. Subjects
A final hypothesis tested by our research is
The subjects were 128 undergraduates, 85 of whom
one that does follow directly even from the received both credit (in partial fulfillment of intro-
weaker statements of Tomkins (1962) and ductory course requirements) and $2.00. The remain-
Izard ( 1 9 7 7 ) , as well as from the stronger ing 43 subjects received $3.00. Five subjects were not
facial feedback hypothesis. It is simply the included in the analyses: 2 left the experiment when
the content of the film was described to them, 1
prediction that, in general, the relationship slopped the film in the middle, and 2 others were
between the facial expression and the emo- lost because of equipment problems.
tional experience should be monotonic and
positive. Procedure
The three hypotheses of necessity, suf-
ficiency, and monotonicity were tested in this There were two experimenters in the study. The
study by a design in which facial expression first was blind to the subject's facial instruction con-
dition. This experimenter (Ei) told the subject the
was manipulated independently of emotional basic cover story: the experiment concerned physio-
stimulation. The basic design included a rep- logical indices of subliminal perception—heart rate,
lication across two emotions—fear and sad- skin conductance, respiration rate, "the orienting re-
ness; we observed facial, physiological, and flex," and "subvocal speech"; all of these responses
self-report responses. We chose fear and sad- would be recorded on a polygraph, and the two that
involved small movements of the eyes and lips would
ness because we felt that it was important to also be recorded on videotape. The subliminal stimuli
demonstrate a distinction between negative would be single frames spliced into a film. Ei then
emotions. The comparison of a single positive explained that certain parts of the procedure might
with a single negative emotion does not pro- cause some discomfort: (a) to prevent the subject
from concentrating too hard on finding the sub-
vide a very stringent test of the qualitative liminal images, the film was intended to be distract-
distinctions among emotions, and is particu- ing, and might be upsetting; (b) since normal muscle
larly prone to demand characteristics and movements could distort some of the physiological
level-of-arousal artifacts.3 Because it in- measures, the subject might be required to hold cer-
cluded measures of all three sets of responses, tain muscles in a somewhat uncomfortable position
during the film; (c) since observers would later score
the study can also address additional ques- the videotapes for the orienting reflex and subvocal
tions about their interrelationships and thus speech response, absolutely complete anonymity could
can provide a basis for comparing all the not be guaranteed. After explaining how the subject
theoretical positions. would be "hooked up" to the polygraph, E, described
the content of the film and obtained the subject's
formal consent.
Method
3
Overview We considered a comparison between fear and
anger, in an attempt to include a replication of Ax
Believing that the experiment was a study of (1955). We had to abandon this plan for the inter-
physiological responses to subliminal stimuli, subjects esting reason that we could find no film that con-
watched a sad, fear-arousing, or emotionally neutral sistently elicited anger more than other emotions in
film. Their heart rate, galvanic skin response, and all subjects.
FACIAL RESPONSE AND EMOTION 1523

Ei then left and sent the second experimenter (Ea) type photographs for the Facial Affect Scoring Tech-
into the room. £2 had been out of earshot and so was nique (Ekman, Friesen, & Tomkins, 1971). In prac-
unaware of the subject's film condition, tice, the instructions varied somewhat depending on
Es placed the electrodes on the subject (electro- how easily the subject adopted the desired position.
cardiograph FEKG] electrodes on the wrists, a res- For the subjects in the fear face, condition, the in-
piration thermistor' on the nostril, GSR electrodes structions typically ran:
on the middle finger, bogus electromyograph FEMG]
electrodes on the face), explaining how they worked There are three sets of muscles around the eyes
and reinforcing the rationale of the cover story. After that can distort the measurement of the orienting
the electrodes had been placed, E2 told the subject to reflex. We want you to contract all three of them.
keep his or her arms still, and gave the instructions The first is the muscle between the eyebrows, the
for holding the face in the position that would facil- corrugator. Contract that muscle by pulling the two
itate recording the facial responses. When E2 was eyebrows together, toward each other in the mid-
satisfied with the subject's facial pose, he left the dle. The second is the muscle in the forehead, the
subject alone for a baseline period with instructions frontalis. Contract the frontalis by raising your
to relax. eyebrows. The last muscle is the one which controls
The baseline period lasted until the subject's phys- the eyelids. Contract that one by opening your
iological responses had appeared stable for at least 1 eyes up wide. There is only one set of muscles
minute. Then E« began videotaping the subject's face you'll have to contract in your mouth. First, part
and repeated the facial instructions (in a shorter your lips slightly; it will be easier. The muscles
f o r m ) . When the facial expression was approximately here (points below corners of mouth I are the tri-
right, Ea told the subject to hold the position during angularis muscles. Contract them by pulling the
the film; he then turned the projector on and im- corners of your mouth down and back. If you're
mediately left the room. As soon as the film was over doing it right, you should feel your neck get tense.
(E, watched through a one-way mirror for the end
of the film), E3 returned and administered a ques- For the sad face subjects, the instructions were sim-
tionnaire containing the self-report emotion items, ilar, although the muscles differed: the corrugator was
along with filler items consistent with the cover story. contracted (brows drawn together), frontalis con-
Ei debriefed the subjects. Although several sub- tracted (inner corner of the brows raised), eyelids
jects expressed confusion about the complex cover relaxed, mentalis contracted (lower lip pushed up and
story, no one guessed that facial expression was the out slightly), and quaclratus muscles contracted (cor-
variable of interest, nor that his or her expression had ners of lips pulled down). The nonemotional face
been an emotional one. subjects were instructed to close one eye, purse their
Two male undergraduates took the Ei role; one lips, and puff out their cheeks. V'nmanipulated face
male graduate student took the E- role. subjects were told to ignore the facial electrodes and
to act "naturally," as we were "interested in deter-
mining whether the orienting reflex and subvocal
Independent Variables speech responses can be detected against a background
of normal facial movements." For all subjects, elec-
Film. We pretested eight films on a group of SO trodes were placed on the chin and below one eye
undergraduates, and selected three because they (for subjects in the nonemotional face condition, this
elicited high agreement across subjects on a single bogus electrode was placed below the eye they were
dominant emotion, with low ratings for all other supposed to close).
emotions. Subjects rated each of five emotions on
two 9-poinl scales (0-8) for each film. The ratings
are the sums of the two scale scores. The fear film Dependent Variables
reliably elicited fear (M = 5.5) ; lesser degrees of
pain, disgust, and interest; and relatively low sadness Self-reported emotion. Fear was measured on two
(M = 2.4). It concerns two accidents in an industrial 9-point scales labeled "scared" and "afraid"; the
shop. The sad film traces the reactions of a small boy scales ranged from "not at all" (0) to "very strongly"
to his brief stay in an orphanage while his mother is (8). These two scales were highly related (r — .&l).
in the hospital. The sad film reliably elicited sadness Sadness was also measured on two 9-point scales;
(M = 3.6) and interest (J/ = 3.4) from pretest sub- these were labeled "sad" and "unhappy" (r = .71).
jects, and low fear (If = 0.75). The neutral film de- As in the pretests, the overall emotion score is the
picts a flower show in the botanical gardens of sum of the two scales.
Golden Gate Park. It was seen as slightly pleasant Facial expressions. Two trained raters blind to the
(If = 2.8) and interesting (Af = 2.1) and not at all subject's conditions scored videotapes on the emo-
sad (Af = 0.20) or frightening (At = 0.02). Each film
lasted for 2 minutes.
4
Facial instructions. The facial instructions were Respiration rate was recorded as a control for
derived from the work of Tomkins (1962), Izard certain heart rate artifacts. These corrections proved
(1971), Ekman and Friesen (1975), and the instruc- unnecessary. The results for respiration rate were not
tions used by the second author in developing proto- analyzed.
1524 ROGER TOURANGEAU AND PHOEBE C. ELLSWORTH

tional content of the subject's facial expressions. For sadder (on a 32-point scale) than the subjects
each subject, the raters judged how sad, unhappy, given any of the other three facial instruc-
scared, and afraid the subject looked. (The scales
for these judgments were identical to those used by
tions, F(3, 3) = 153.1, p < .01. Subjects
the subjects in judging their own emotions; they given the fear face instructions averaged 13
were, thus, 9-poinl scales ranging from "not at all" points higher on rated facial fear, F(3, 3) =
to "very strongly.") The facial sadness measure is the 327.1, p < .01. The facial instructions thus
sum of the two raters' judgments for "sad" and seemed to have succeeded.
"unhappy"; similarly, the facial fear rating is the
sum of the two ratings of "scared" and "afraid." There is also some indication that the film
Physiological indices. Physiological responses were affected ratings of facial expression. Subjects
monitored by a Narco-Bio Desk Model Physiograph. watching the fear film looked more fearful
EKG electrodes were attached to the subjects' wrists (M = 8.2) than those watching the sad (4.4)
with a ground electrode on the ankle. A cardiotach-
ometer averaged the beat-to-beat interval over five
or neutral (5.4) films, F(2, 2) =116.7, p <
beats and recorded the heart rate in beats per min- .01. There was no corresponding effect for
ute. The skin resistance was monitored by passing a rated facial sadness. This effect provides some
small direct current through two plate electrodes at- evidence for the validity of the judges' rat-
tached to the top and bottom of the subject's middle ings (since the film might have been expected
finger.
Artificiality. Our efforts to keep the experimenters to affect facial expression in the obtained di-
blind to the subject's condition, to prevent the sub- rection) and of the success of the films in
jects from guessing the hypotheses, and to collect creating real emotions but also indicates that
three different kinds of data, although successful, the facial instructions manipulation was not
resulted in a situation that was complicated and wholly successful. Apparently subjects could
unusual and may recall the futile efforts of early re-
searchers to obtain photographs of "true emotions" not consistently maintain their instructed ex-
in the laboratory (e.g., Landis, 1924). Although emo- pression when confronted with the strong
tional experience may have been attenuated in our stimuli of the film. Though reliable, the effect
setting, there is no evidence that this was the case. of the film is small, particularly when com-
First, the self-reported emotional reactions to the
films were at least as high as those obtained in pre- pared with the effect for facial instructions.
testing; second, several subjects spontaneously com- There were no interactions nor main effects
mented on their emotional arousal, and one stopped for experimenter on rated facial expression.
the projector because the film was too upsetting;
third, there were no false alarms in the reporting of
subliminal stimuli, as might be expected if the task s
The cell sizes in this study are unequal. While the
demands distracted subjects from the arousing prop- differences are small, they may in part reflect the
erties of the films; and finally, unlike the early re- experimental variables of interest; the film, for ex-
search, our emotional stimuli produced significant ample, may have affected subject attrition slightly
differences on the dependent variables. (two fear film subjects, one sad film subject, and no
neutral film subjects refused to participate after
learning about the film they would see). Under these
Results •' circumstances, weighted means analysis seemed most
advisable (Winer, 1962, p. 2 2 2 ) . Partly because the
Facial Expression inequalities are so small, unweighted analyses yield
identical conclusions.
The judgments of facial expression appear The film and face variables were treated as fixed
factors and experimenter as a random factor. Thus
to be reliable across raters: for the two-item main effects for the film and facial instructions were
sadness index, the two raters' judgments cor- tested against their interaction with the experimenter
related .76 (p < .001); for the fear index, factor. Error terms based on pooling these inter-
action terms with the within-group sum of squares
the two raters correlated at .81. For the re- (Winer, 1962, pp. 202-207) do not alter the conclu-
maining analyses, ratings were summed over sions except where reported. The pooling procedure
the two judges. is used whenever permissible for planned and a pos-
The facial instructions had the expected teriori comparisons, because of the handicap of 1 and
large effect on the ratings of facial expression. 1 degrees of freedom. Small variations in the degrees
of freedom in these analyses reflect missing data and
On the average, subjects given the sad facial the specific terms that could be included in the pooled
instructions were rated as more than 15 points error term.
FACIAL RESPONSE AND EMOTION 1525

Self-Reported Emotion Table 2


Mean Self-Reported Sadness
As Tables 1 and 2 show, the film had sub-
stantial effects on the subjects' ratings of their Facial instructions
own emotions: for fear, F(2, 2) = 29.5, p < Noncmo- Unmanip-
.05; for sadness, F(2, 2) = 42.1, p < .05. Filni Fear Sad tional ulated M
A priori contrasts indicated that subjects who
watched the fear film were more frightened Fear 4.1 4.4 4.7 3.5 4.4
than subjects who watched the other films, Sad 8.9 8.8 9.7 8.8 9.1
Neutral 0.9 2.6 J.9 1.4 1.6
F(l, 106) = 17.9, p < .01; subjects who saw
the sad film were sadder, F(l, 103) = 77.1, Note. Scale ranges from 0 to 16, with higher numbers
p < .01. Each contrast accounts for more than indicating greater sadness,
90% of the variance among the means for the
three film conditions. (See Footnote 5 for an film subjects 1.42 points lower, F(2, 2 ) =
explanation of the degrees of freedom). 20.5, p < .05. No other effects were signif-
An examination of the difference between icant.
fear (or sadness) and the mean of all other Both the necessity hypothesis (that facial
emotion ratings confirms this analysis. Com- responses are necessary for the felt emotion)
pared to subjects who watched the sad and and the sufficiency hypothesis (that facial re-
neutral films, fear film subjects felt predom- sponses are sufficient for felt emotion) of the
inantly fear. For subjects who watched the facial feedback theory predict effects for facial
fear film, the self-rated fear was 2.65 points instructions. There are, however, no signif-
higher than the average self-rating of all the icant main effects for facial expression instruc-
other emotions; for sad film subjects self- tions on either emotion, nor does facial in-
rated fear was 1.06 points lower than the struction interact significantly with film.
average across the other emotions, and for One possible interpretation of the lack of
neutral film subjects it was about the same— effects for facial instructions is that the sub-
0.28 points lower, F(2, 2) = 113.8, p < .01. jects were simply unable to maintain their
The overall analysis also shows an uninter- facial expressions during the film. Part of the
pretable Face X E interaction. No other ef- film effect, then, may reflect covariation of the
fects are significant. Compared to subjects facial expression with the film condition. Par-
who watched the fear and neutral films, sad tialing out variation in felt emotion due to
film subjects felt predominantly sadness. facial expression through analysis of covari-
Their self-rated sadness was 5.20 points higher ance, however, fails to alter significantly the
than the average of all the other emotions; very substantial film effects. The effects of the
for fear film subjects self-rated sadness was film on self-reported emotion are thus not at-
about the same as the average of all other tributable to differences in facial expression
emotions (.06 points lower) and for neutral across film conditions.
A weakened version of the sufficiency hy-
Table 1 pothesis might predict that, in the absence of
Mean Self- >orted Fear strong situational cues, the facial expression
may be sufficient to determine felt emotion.
Facial instructions The neutral film subjects, by this argument,
should show an effect for facial expression.
Noncmo- Unmanip-
Film Fear Sad tional ulated M This prediction receives very slight support:
among those subjects who watched the neutral
Fear 6.0 7.S 7.8 4.6 6,5 film, the sad face subjects are, on the average,
Sad 3.3 3.2 3.9 3.9 3.6 slightly sadder than subjects in the other three
Neutral 3.3 2.1 2.3 2.2 2.5
facial instructions conditions; similarly, of
Note. Scale ranges from 0 to 16, with higher numbers the neutral film subjects, the fear face sub-
indicating greater fear. jects report the most fear. Neither of these
1526 ROGER TOURANGEAU AND PHOEBE C. ELLSWORTH

Table 3
Means on Physiological Indices by Film and Facial Instructions Condition

Condition Fall in HR Rise in HR Fall in GSR No. GSRs

Film
Fear 7.4 21.3 71.0 14.4
Sad 7.7 16.4 67.1 11.0
Neutral 10.8 14.6 52.2 11.7

Facial instructions
Fear 8.4 17.0 43.8 12.6
Sad 8.8 17,5 60.2 10.2
Noncmotional 7.1 19.6 63.8 15.8
Unmanipulatcd 9.9 15.7 86.2 11.0

Note. HR = heart rate (change computed in beats per minute). GSR = galvanic skin response (change com-
puted in thousands of ohms).

trends for the neutral film subjects, however, Both skin resistance measures are reported in
is statistically significant, either by a priori thousands of ohms. The heart rate (HR)
comparisons within the context of the analysis measures are in beats per minute. The rel-
of variance or by Kruskal-Wallis one-way evant means for the physiological variables
analyses of variance for ranked data. are given in Table 3.
Overall, the relationship between facial ex- Rise in heart rate. The largest rise in HR
pression and reported emotion is slight. The for each subject was calculated as the differ-
correlation between the ratings of facial fear ence between maximum and baseline HR. The
and self-reported fear is .01; between facial film had a significant effect on this index, F(2,
and self-reported sadness, it is .02. The 2) = 36.4, p < .05. A posteriori contrasts
strongly positive relationship between facial (Scheffe criterion, Winer, 1962, p. 88) indi-
expression and self-reported emotion predicted cate that subjects who watched the fear film
by all the facial feedback theories does not showed the largest rises in heart rate; neutral
seem to obtain. and sad film subjects showed smaller rises and
were similar on this index, F(l, 105) — 11.00,
Physiological Measures p < .05; the contrast accounts for 96% of the
variation among the means of the film groups.
Two coders scored the polygraph recordings None of the other main effects or interactions
of the physiological variables. Their agree- are statistically significant.
ment was substantial, correlations between Fall in heart rate. By subtracting the
them ranging from .96 to 1.00 (median r = lowest heart rate from the index of baseline
.98). Indices were based on six variables: heart rate, we can find the largest fall in
baseline heartrate, the average of the sub- heart rate. There is a nearly significant effect
ject's heart rate 10 and 5 seconds prior to the for the film on this variable, F ( 2 , 2) = 17.1,
end of the 'baseline period (each heart rate .10 > p > .05. An a posteriori contrast is
reading is itself an average based on five beat- similarly marginal: neutral film subjects show
to-beat intervals); baseline skin resistance, the largest drop in heart rate; fear and sad
also an average of readings 10 and S seconds subjects show similarly smaller drops, F(l,
prior to the end of the baseline period; max- 105) = 4.78, .10 > p > .05; the contrast ac-
imum heart rate during the film period; min- counts for 99% of the variation. There is also
imum heart rate during the film; number of an effect for the facial instructions variable,
skin responses (any fall exceeding 1,000 ohms F(3, 3) = 37.2, p < .05. Subjects in the non-
prior to leveling off was scored as a response); emotional face condition show the smallest
and lowest skin resistance during the film. drop in heart rate, subjects in the unmanipu-
FACIAL RESPONSE AND EMOTION 1527

lated face condition the largest. The interac- Table 4


tion term used to test this effect for facial Correlations of Physiological Variables with
instruction is quite small (F < 1); with a Facial and Self-Report Measures
pooled error term, the effect is no longer sig-
nificant: F(3, 105) < 1, ns. None of the other Facial
Self-report expression
effects is significant.
Fall in GSR. Subtracting the lowest skin Item Fear Sad Fear Sad
resistance from the baseline index yields a
measure of overall change in skin resistance. Fall in HR -.05 -.10 .02 -.01
Rise in HR .16* -.05 .04 -.02
Facial instruction condition has an effect on Fall in GSR -.05 .03 .08 -.08
this variable: Subjects in the unmanipulated No. of GSRs -.05 -.18* -.02 -.14
facial condition showed the largest drop in Maximum HR .19* -.08 03 .02
skin resistance, the fear instructions subjects Minimum HR .16* .00 .01 -.01
the smallest. As with the facial instructions
Lowest GSR .06 .19* -:o7 -.06
effect on fall in heart rate, the statistical sig- Note. HR = heart rate (change measured in beats
nificance of this is probably overestimated by per minute). GSR = galvanic skin response (change
the use of the Face X E interaction term as measured in thousands of ohms).
the error term: F(3, 3) - 44.4, p < .01; a *p < .05.
pooled error yields F(3, 97) = 1.7, ns. The
other effects do not reach statistical signif- the effects depends on the choice of the error
icance. term. For fall in HR, the nonemotional facial
instructions subjects seem the most "aroused"
Number oj galvanic skin responses. Each
(showing the smallest drop). This is in line
time skin resistance fell by 1,000 ohms, it was
with the hydraulic-cathartic view. It is the
scored as a response. The film variable had a
unmanipulated subjects, however, rather than
significant effect of the number of GSRs: F(2,
the fear or sad face subjects, who show the
2) =57.1, /> < .01. An a posteriori contrast
least "arousal" (largest drop). Similarly, the
is marginally significant: Subjects watching
fear face subjects show the smallest drop in
the fear film had more GSRs on the average
skin resistance, again in line with the hy-
than the sad and neutral film subjects, F(l,
draulic-cathartic view; however, this time the
98) = 5.63, .10 > p > .05; the contrast ac-
unmanipulated rather than the nonemotional
counts for 95% of the variation.
subjects show most arousal. Table 4 offers
Summary of physiological effects. Three of further evidence of the traditionally weak and
the four physiological variables showed signif- somewhat inconsistent relationship between
icant film effects. For heart rate fall, sad and facial expression and physiological response.
fear film subjects were similar, both being
lower than neutral film subjects. For rise in
heart rate and number of skin responses, the Discussion
sad film subjects were closer to the neutral The Facial Feedback Hypothesis
film subjects. There was no reliable effect for
film on largest fall in skin resistance, although On the assumption that the facial instruc-
the pattern was similar to that for heart rate tions had their intended effect, the facial feed-
(sad and fear subjects were similar and both back hypothesis receives three major setbacks
were different from neutral film subjects). from the evidence of this study. First, adopt-
This pattern of different physiological signs ing an emotional facial expression does not
for different emotional stimuli also appears in appear to be sufficient to produce the emotion.
Table 4. The pattern of correlations between Even when there were no competing emotional
physiological variables and self-reported emo- stimuli from the film (i.e., for the neutral film
tion differs for sadness and fear. subjects), manipulated facial expression did
Both fall in heart rate and fall in GSR not produce significant differences in emo-
show some evidence for facial instructions tional responding. The trend for these sub-
effects, although the statistical significance of jects, insofar as there was a trend, was in the
1528 ROGER TOURANGEAU AND PHOEBE C. ELLSWORTH

direction predicted by the facial feedback canonical fear expression, it is difficult to be-
hypothesis. This trend appears to replicate lieve that it didn't greatly interfere with the
Laird's (1974) results: the differences he emergence of the sad expression, thus reduc-
found were of about the same magnitude as ing felt sadness. Finally, the existence of the
those in our neutral film condition, and it is film effect, its independence of the facial ex-
probably a safe assumption that his stimuli pression, and its magnitude compared with
(still photographs) were less arousing than that of any facial effect present difficulties
our fear and sadness films. for the facial feedback position. As to these
Second, adopting a nonemotional expression relative magnitudes, our results are in com-
does not prevent emotional responding; thus, plete agreement with those presented by Laird
emotional expression does not seem necessary (1974).
for emotional feelings. Similarly, correcting The lack of any correlation between facial
for changes in facial expression statistically by expression and reported emotion is damaging
analysis of covariance does not remove the not only to the rather strong and unqualified
effect of the film. Although this technique may version of the facial feedback hypothesis
be biased in the direction of undercorrection, tested in this experiment but also to the more
it is hard to see how any statistical method elaborated, qualified theories proposed by
based on the correlation between facial ex- Tomkins (1962) and by Izard (1971, 1977).
pression and reported emotion could alter the Even if there are reafferent loops and even
film effect—the correlation is zero. if the proprioceptive feedback along voluntary
Finally, this lack of correlation constitutes and involuntary pathways is recognizably dif-
especially damaging evidence against the ferent, the theories ought to predict a gen-
theory. Examination of the scatter plots of erally positive correlation. The unmanipulated
facial and self-reported fear and of facial and face condition is especially relevant here, since
self-reported sadness does not provide obvious there were no instructions to introduce poten-
support for any monotonic relationship be- tially confusing voluntary feedback. In these
tween self-report and facial expression of conditions, all facial expression was sponta-
emotion, let alone the linear relation mea- neous, and the correlations between expression
sured by the correlation coefficient. Thus, even and reported emotion were still infinitesimal
a threshold version of the facial feedback (r — —.01 for fear; r ~ .07 for sadness).6
hypothesis seems untenable. Lanzetta, Cart-
wright-Smith, and Kleck's (1976) finding of Physiological Results
an effect of facial expression on feelings of
pain does not seem to extend to feelings of It is possible that self-reported emotion
fear or sadness. may reflect the subject's perception of the ex-
Even if the facial manipulation were un- pected effect of the film. Such demand char-
successful, the facial feedback hypothesis acteristics are also relevant to Laird's (1974)
would be difficult to maintain. The absence of study and may account for the effects of the
any correlation between rated expression and stimuli on self-reported emotion in both his
reported emotion might buttress an argument study and ours. The effects of the film on the
based on failure of the facial manipulation. physiological variables cannot be so easily
The convergence of the facial instructions accounted for by demand characteristics.
with raters' judgments could be explained
away: raters might have recognized the in- 6
In general the subjects in the unmanipulated face
tended expression even though subjects' faces condition showed little overt facial response. It is
were poor reflections of the canonical fear or possible that covert facial expressions, unobserved by
sad expression. Granting both of these argu- our raters, did correlate with self-report of emotion
ments, we still must explain the absence of (cf. Schwartz, Fair, Salt, Mandel, & Klerman, 1976).
Thus it is still possible that covert involuntary muscle
inhibiting effects for facial expression; even activity has some causal influence, although the dif-
if the facial manipulation of fear, for example, ficulties of separating this influence from the effect of
were woefully inadequate to produce the the eliciting emotional stimuli are enormous.
FACIAL RESPONSE AND EMOTION 1529

Table 5
Mean Physiological Arousal for Nonemotional and Unmanipulated Face Subjects
in Neutral Film Condition

Item Nonemotional Unmanipulated t (18)

Number of GSRs 16.4 10.0 1.94 .07


Fall in GSR 68.6 58.5 1.53 ns
Rise in MR 18.0 13.4 1.S3 ns
Fall in HR 6.8 12.6 -1.74 .10

Note, n — 9 in the nonemotional face condition; n = 11 in the Unmanipulated face condition. GSR = gal-
vanic skin response (change measured in thousands of ohms). HR = heart rate (change measured in beats
per minute).

Subjects who watched the fear film showed effect on physiological responding, although
generally greater "arousal" than subjects who the statistical significance of the findings is
watched the sad or neutral film. The pattern dubious. For the two heart rate variables and
of rises and falls for subjects who watched the number of GSRs, nonemotional face sub-
the fear film is quite similar to the pattern jects did, in line with the hydraulic model,
reported by Ax (1953) for fearful subjects. show more physiological "arousal" than sub-
For the heart rate variables, sad film subjects jects who received the other facial instruc-
were intermediate between fear and neutral tions. The results for Unmanipulated subjects,
film subjects. However, sad film subjects whose facial emotion was more than that of
showed even fewer GSRs than subjects who the nonemotional face subjects but less than
saw the neutral film, These data support the that of subjects posed with a fearful or sad
notion of different physiological patterns for expression, create difficulties for the hydraulic
different emotions. This position receives fur- view. In general, the Unmanipulated face sub-
ther support from correlations between phys- jects showed the least arousal.7
iological variables and self-reported emotion; On the whole, these results are in line with
again, sadness seems related to lower levels of an effort or concentration hypothesis. The
arousal, fear to higher levels. These findings nonemotional facial position, which required
tend to render the demand-characteristics subjects to close one eye and puff out their
account relatively less plausible. Fear film cheeks, was probably the most difficult posi-
subjects seem to show the physiological pat- tion to maintain and required a great deal of
tern for fear. These findings also tend to concentration. The Unmanipulated face, of
render suspect the theoretical utility of the course, required no special effort at all. That
nonspecific arousal concept. (Of course, the concentration on a task can produce physio-
mere existence of physiologically distinct pat- logical changes has been amply demonstrated
terns does not guarantee that people use them, (e.g., Lacey, 1950; Lacey, Kagan, Lacey, &
as the James-Lange theory asserts, as cues Moss, 1963). This mechanism can also ac-
to their emotional state.) count for the individual differences reported
by previous investigators (Lanzetta & Kleck,
Facial and Physiological Variables 1970; Buck, Savin, Miller, & Caul, 1972;
Buck, Miller, & Caul, 1974): "natural" in-
The Freudian hydraulic model suggests that
there are different channels for emotional ex-
pression; as one channel is used more, the 7
The exception is fall in skin resistance. Unmanip-
others are used less in releasing emotional ulated subjects had the highest skin resistance during
energy. We might expect, according to this the baseline period. They showed the largest drop
theory, negative relations between measures during the film; despite this, their lowest skin resist-
ance during the film still averaged higher than that
of physiological arousal and facial expression. of subjects in the other groups. Some of their large
Manipulated facial expression did have some drop doubtless reflects regression artifacts.
1530 ROGER TOURANGEAU AND PHOEBE C. ELLSWORTH

hibitors concentrate on inhibiting their facial emotion has an effect on physiological re-
expressions; this concentration produces sponse. Besides supporting the common sense
changes in GSR. The effects of facial instruc- view, these results also support a general self-
tions on physiological arousal are not entirely perception hypothesis. A variety of cues—
in line with the hydraulic model and are per- facial, physiological, situational-—may enter
haps better explained by an effort or concen- into the subjective experience of an emotion.
tration mechanism. Our results suggest that the situational cues
This hypothesis is, however, both tentative receive the most weight.
and post hoc. Although some of the facial
effects are significant, others are not. Com-
paring nonemotional and unmanipulated face References
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