Neural measures of the causal role of observers' facial mimicry on visual working memory for facial expressions
Paola Sessa, Arianna Schiano Lomoriello, Roy Luria

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that facial mimicry influences visual working memory for facial expressions, with effects modulated by empathy levels, highlighting a sensorimotor contribution to facial expression memory processing.
Contribution
It provides novel evidence linking facial mimicry to visual working memory for faces and shows how empathy modulates this relationship.
Findings
Blocked mimicry reduces SPCN amplitude for faces.
Higher empathy individuals show greater mimicry effects.
Full expressions elicit larger SPCN amplitudes than neutral or subtle expressions.
Abstract
Simulation models of facial expressions propose that sensorimotor regions may increase the clarity of facial expressions representations in extrastriate areas. We monitored the event-related potential marker of visual working memory (VWM) representations, namely the sustained posterior contralateral negativity (SPCN), also termed contralateral delay activity (CDA), while participants performed a change detection task including to-be-memorized faces with different intensities of anger. In one condition participants could freely use their facial mimicry during the encoding/VWM maintenance of the faces, while in a different condition, participants had their facial mimicry blocked by a gel. Notably, SPCN amplitude was reduced for faces in the blocked mimicry condition when compared to the free mimicry condition. This modulation interacted with the empathy levels of participants such that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Memory and Neural Mechanisms · Face Recognition and Perception
