A comparative study on facially expressed emotions in response to basic tastes

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A comparative study on facially expressed emotions in response to basic tastes. / Bredie, Wender; Tan, Hui Shan Grace; Wendin, Karin Maria Elisabet.

In: Chemosensory Perception, Vol. 7, No. 1, 2014, p. 1-9.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bredie, W, Tan, HSG & Wendin, KME 2014, 'A comparative study on facially expressed emotions in response to basic tastes', Chemosensory Perception, vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12078-014-9163-6

APA

Bredie, W., Tan, H. S. G., & Wendin, K. M. E. (2014). A comparative study on facially expressed emotions in response to basic tastes. Chemosensory Perception, 7(1), 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12078-014-9163-6

Vancouver

Bredie W, Tan HSG, Wendin KME. A comparative study on facially expressed emotions in response to basic tastes. Chemosensory Perception. 2014;7(1):1-9. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12078-014-9163-6

Author

Bredie, Wender ; Tan, Hui Shan Grace ; Wendin, Karin Maria Elisabet. / A comparative study on facially expressed emotions in response to basic tastes. In: Chemosensory Perception. 2014 ; Vol. 7, No. 1. pp. 1-9.

Bibtex

@article{af50166c2d1146cdbdf0f3e2470b9011,
title = "A comparative study on facially expressed emotions in response to basic tastes",
abstract = "Facially expressed emotions play a role in communication between individuals. They form another means of expressing oneself besides verbal expressions or self-reporting of feelings and perceptions on psychometric scales and are implicit in nature. This study aimed to evaluate the extent and specificity of evoking facial expressed emotions by basic tastes and to evaluate if facially expressed emotions provide additional information to explicit measures. The emotions were characterised upon tasting the five basic tastes in aqueous solutions at three different concentrations levels. The sensory and emotional responses reported were obtained from a 21-membered taste panel. Facial reactions and facially expressed emotions depended on the taste quality and taste intensity. However, the facially expressed emotions were generally weak even for the relatively strong taste intensities. Bitter (caffeine), sour (citric acid) and salty (sodium chloride) lead to clear disgust and surprise responses, whereas, sweet (sucrose) and umami (glutamic acid monosodium salt) taste gave weakly noticeable facially expressed emotions. Although correlations between the expressed emotions and hedonic responses were observed, the affective experience had a limited predictive ability for the facially expressed emotion at the individual level. In conclusion, psychometric rating of the hedonic response is easier to assess than facially expressed emotions although it may not completely represent the dimensions of the emotional experience.",
author = "Wender Bredie and Tan, {Hui Shan Grace} and Wendin, {Karin Maria Elisabet}",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1007/s12078-014-9163-6",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "1--9",
journal = "Chemosensory Perception",
issn = "1936-5802",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A comparative study on facially expressed emotions in response to basic tastes

AU - Bredie, Wender

AU - Tan, Hui Shan Grace

AU - Wendin, Karin Maria Elisabet

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Facially expressed emotions play a role in communication between individuals. They form another means of expressing oneself besides verbal expressions or self-reporting of feelings and perceptions on psychometric scales and are implicit in nature. This study aimed to evaluate the extent and specificity of evoking facial expressed emotions by basic tastes and to evaluate if facially expressed emotions provide additional information to explicit measures. The emotions were characterised upon tasting the five basic tastes in aqueous solutions at three different concentrations levels. The sensory and emotional responses reported were obtained from a 21-membered taste panel. Facial reactions and facially expressed emotions depended on the taste quality and taste intensity. However, the facially expressed emotions were generally weak even for the relatively strong taste intensities. Bitter (caffeine), sour (citric acid) and salty (sodium chloride) lead to clear disgust and surprise responses, whereas, sweet (sucrose) and umami (glutamic acid monosodium salt) taste gave weakly noticeable facially expressed emotions. Although correlations between the expressed emotions and hedonic responses were observed, the affective experience had a limited predictive ability for the facially expressed emotion at the individual level. In conclusion, psychometric rating of the hedonic response is easier to assess than facially expressed emotions although it may not completely represent the dimensions of the emotional experience.

AB - Facially expressed emotions play a role in communication between individuals. They form another means of expressing oneself besides verbal expressions or self-reporting of feelings and perceptions on psychometric scales and are implicit in nature. This study aimed to evaluate the extent and specificity of evoking facial expressed emotions by basic tastes and to evaluate if facially expressed emotions provide additional information to explicit measures. The emotions were characterised upon tasting the five basic tastes in aqueous solutions at three different concentrations levels. The sensory and emotional responses reported were obtained from a 21-membered taste panel. Facial reactions and facially expressed emotions depended on the taste quality and taste intensity. However, the facially expressed emotions were generally weak even for the relatively strong taste intensities. Bitter (caffeine), sour (citric acid) and salty (sodium chloride) lead to clear disgust and surprise responses, whereas, sweet (sucrose) and umami (glutamic acid monosodium salt) taste gave weakly noticeable facially expressed emotions. Although correlations between the expressed emotions and hedonic responses were observed, the affective experience had a limited predictive ability for the facially expressed emotion at the individual level. In conclusion, psychometric rating of the hedonic response is easier to assess than facially expressed emotions although it may not completely represent the dimensions of the emotional experience.

U2 - 10.1007/s12078-014-9163-6

DO - 10.1007/s12078-014-9163-6

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

SP - 1

EP - 9

JO - Chemosensory Perception

JF - Chemosensory Perception

SN - 1936-5802

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 102087052