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Cross_cultural psychology Kazakhstan A.docx
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7.1.3 The definitive answer to the source of the facial expressions of emotions: Biology is the determinant.

Whether learning has a role, or whether facial expressions of emotions are fundamentally caused by biology can be answered by a study with blind people, especially in respondents born blind who have had no opportunity to observe the expression of others. If respondents who are congenitally blind (and therefore have no possibility for visual observations and the social learning of facial emotional expressions) show similar expressions as sighted respondents such results must be accepted as evidence of their inherited nature.

Matsumoto and Willingham (2006) studied the spontaneous facial expressions of sighted athletes who won gold, silver, bronze or were fifth place winners in the judo competition at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games. The 84 athletes from 35 countries represented a very culturally diverse group and were photographed after their matches and during the medal ceremonies. The athlete’s expressions were recorded immediately by using high-speed film when they knew they had won a medal (or not). The photographs were taken in a naturalistic and spontaneous field setting and recorded the athletes’ expressions at what was obviously a salient emotional time. The results showed no significant differences in emotional expression between the cultures represented in the competition supporting the universality of emotional facial expressions.

In the second study (Matsumoto & Willingham 2009) examined the facial expressions of congenitally blind and non-congenitally blind athletes who participated from 23 cultures in the 2004 Para-Olympic games in Athens. These athletes were recorded in the same way as the sighted athletes in the 2006 report. No differences in facial reactions were found between the congenital and non-congenital blind athletes, and their reaction results were therefore combined. The concordance between the sighted and blind athletes were nearly perfect with correlations for facial muscle behaviors varying from .94 for recordings made at match completion, to .98 for when the athletes received the medal, and .96 for facial expressions at the podium. This similarity between sighted and blind spontaneous facial expressions offers definitive support that these reactions are genetically coded and not socially learned and is universal in all cultures.

7.1.4 Universal agreement and cultural emphasis in other emotion constructs.

Human emotions are responses of the whole person and involve various components. This consideration point to both innate components discussed above, but also to the possibility of cultural modifications in the experiencing of emotion. With our common evolutionary heritage it is easy to understand that much about emotions are similar across all cultures. At the same time cultures modify some aspects of emotion especially those components affected by cognition (Frijda, 1993). In recent research an attempt was made to distinguish different components of emotion and several cross-cultural factors have been identified (Mesquita, Frijda, & Scherer, 1997). Research has been conducted on components that elicit emotions also called antecedents. Other research has examined appraisals that are the evaluations of the antecedents. Physiological reactions as noted have also been identified in both the autonomic and central nervous systems.

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