Effects of regulatory focus and processing styles on perceiving group facial emotion: a mediation study

Research in the area of facial emotion perception had produced mixed findings as to which processing style led to better recognition performance. Such mixed findings presented a research gap, in which my study intends to reconcile by exploring whether regulatory focus mediates the effect of processi...

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Main Author: Lee, Xin Hui
Other Authors: Kenichi Ito
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70572
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-705722019-12-10T13:07:27Z Effects of regulatory focus and processing styles on perceiving group facial emotion: a mediation study Lee, Xin Hui Kenichi Ito School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology Research in the area of facial emotion perception had produced mixed findings as to which processing style led to better recognition performance. Such mixed findings presented a research gap, in which my study intends to reconcile by exploring whether regulatory focus mediates the effect of processing styles on perception of group facial emotion. Specifically, a match between promotion-focus and global processing, as well as between prevention-focus and local processing was proposed. This constituted a regulatory fit condition. Furthermore, since perceiving group facial emotion is more appropriate to reflect the reality of societal and organizational context, my study seeks to extend previous findings of processing styles towards perceiving more than a single face. Processing styles and regulatory focus were primed using Navon task and implicit poster priming respectively, prior to engaging in group facial emotion recognition task. Results did not find evidence for the hypothesized mediation effect. Participants in the regulatory fit condition did not show enhanced performance as compared to those in the regulatory mis-fit condition. However, side analysis found significance for processing styles as a predictor for the performance levels (reaction time) of group facial emotion recognition, as well as the main effect of regulatory focus on accuracy of recognition. Limitations and implications of the study were discussed in the paper. Bachelor of Arts 2017-05-02T02:47:52Z 2017-05-02T02:47:52Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70572 en Nanyang Technological University 50 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Lee, Xin Hui
Effects of regulatory focus and processing styles on perceiving group facial emotion: a mediation study
description Research in the area of facial emotion perception had produced mixed findings as to which processing style led to better recognition performance. Such mixed findings presented a research gap, in which my study intends to reconcile by exploring whether regulatory focus mediates the effect of processing styles on perception of group facial emotion. Specifically, a match between promotion-focus and global processing, as well as between prevention-focus and local processing was proposed. This constituted a regulatory fit condition. Furthermore, since perceiving group facial emotion is more appropriate to reflect the reality of societal and organizational context, my study seeks to extend previous findings of processing styles towards perceiving more than a single face. Processing styles and regulatory focus were primed using Navon task and implicit poster priming respectively, prior to engaging in group facial emotion recognition task. Results did not find evidence for the hypothesized mediation effect. Participants in the regulatory fit condition did not show enhanced performance as compared to those in the regulatory mis-fit condition. However, side analysis found significance for processing styles as a predictor for the performance levels (reaction time) of group facial emotion recognition, as well as the main effect of regulatory focus on accuracy of recognition. Limitations and implications of the study were discussed in the paper.
author2 Kenichi Ito
author_facet Kenichi Ito
Lee, Xin Hui
format Final Year Project
author Lee, Xin Hui
author_sort Lee, Xin Hui
title Effects of regulatory focus and processing styles on perceiving group facial emotion: a mediation study
title_short Effects of regulatory focus and processing styles on perceiving group facial emotion: a mediation study
title_full Effects of regulatory focus and processing styles on perceiving group facial emotion: a mediation study
title_fullStr Effects of regulatory focus and processing styles on perceiving group facial emotion: a mediation study
title_full_unstemmed Effects of regulatory focus and processing styles on perceiving group facial emotion: a mediation study
title_sort effects of regulatory focus and processing styles on perceiving group facial emotion: a mediation study
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70572
_version_ 1681040990340644864