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  • Perception and memory-based...
    Chang, Chi-Hsun; Drobotenko, Natalia; Ruocco, Anthony C.; Lee, Andy C.H.; Nestor, Adrian

    Cognition, April 2024, 2024-04-00, 20240401, Volume: 245
    Journal Article

    Personality traits and affective states are associated with biases in facial emotion perception. However, the precise personality impairments and affective states that underlie these biases remain largely unknown. To investigate how relevant factors influence facial emotion perception and recollection, Experiment 1 employed an image reconstruction approach in which community-dwelling adults (N = 89) rated the similarity of pairs of facial expressions, including those recalled from memory. Subsequently, perception- and memory-based expression representations derived from such ratings were assessed across participants and related to measures of personality impairment, state affect, and visual recognition abilities. Impairment in self-direction and level of positive affect accounted for the largest components of individual variability in perception and memory representations, respectively. Additionally, individual differences in these representations were impacted by face recognition ability. In Experiment 2, adult participants (N = 81) rated facial image reconstructions derived in Experiment 1, revealing that individual variability was associated with specific visual face properties, such as expressiveness, representation accuracy, and positivity/negativity. These findings highlight and clarify the influence of personality, affective state, and recognition abilities on individual differences in the perception and recollection of facial expressions. •Multiple factors systematically impact perception and memory for facial expressions.•Personality functioning and affective states modulate expression representations.•General face recognition abilities also impact representations.•These factors introduce considerable pictorial changes in face representations.