The impact of emotional congruent and emotional neutral context on recognizing complex emotions in older adults

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

Abstract

Adding context information has been shown to attenuate the age-related decline of emotion recognition. Specifically, older adults might benefit from emotional congruent context information due to their greater social knowledge. Contrary, emotional neutral context information might impair older adults’ performance more due to their decline of inhibitory abilities. Our aim was to examine the age-related decline of complex emotion recognition across three context conditions (emotional congruent, emotional neutral and no context). We hypothesized that emotional congruent context will help older adults to perform at the same level as younger adults and expected worse performance of older adults in the emotional neutral and no context conditions. Twenty-eight older and 28 younger adults watched film clips with complex emotions preceded by a fixation cross (no context), emotional congruent context or emotional neutral context. Emotional neutral context affected older adults’ performance more negatively than young adults’, whereas emotional congruent improved performance of both young and older adults to a similar extent. Results suggest that emotional congruent context does not eliminate the overall age-related deficit in complex emotion recognition. In contrast, this deficit might be intensified by emotional neutral context.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)677-692
Number of pages16
Journal Aging, neuropsychology, and cognition : a journal on normal and dysfunctional development
Volume27
Issue number5
Publication statusPublished - 2 Sept 2020
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 31621481
ORCID /0000-0003-1477-5395/work/173517034

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Aging, complex emotion, congruency, context, emotion recognition