Men exhibited larger heart rate decreases for anger, amusement, and pleasure videos, whereas women reported higher emotional expressivity, particularly for negative emotions.
Observational (n=79)
No
Do men and women differ in emotional experience and expressivity when watching emotion-inducing videos?
Men often have more intense physiological emotional experiences to certain stimuli, whereas women exhibit higher subjective emotional expressivity, particularly for negative emotions.
p-value: p=0.005
The present study investigated gender differences in both emotional experience and expressivity. Heart rate (HR) was recorded as an indicator of emotional experience while the participants watched 16 video clips that induced eight types of emotion (sadness, anger, horror, disgust, neutrality, amusement, surprise, and pleasure). We also asked the participants to report valence, arousal, and motivation as indicators of emotional expressivity. Overall, the results revealed gender differences in emotional experience and emotional expressivity. When watching videos that induced anger, amusement, and pleasure, men showed larger decreases in HR, whereas women reported higher levels of arousal. There was no gender difference in HR when the participants watched videos that induced horror and disgust, but women reported lower valence, higher arousal, and stronger avoidance motivation than did men. Finally, no gender difference was observed in sadness or surprise, although there was one exception-women reported higher arousal when watching videos that induced sadness. The findings suggest that, when watching videos that induce an emotional response, men often have more intense emotional experiences, whereas women have higher emotional expressivity, particularly for negative emotions. In addition, gender differences depend on the specific emotion type but not the valence.
Deng et al. (Thu,) conducted a observational in Healthy volunteers (n=79). Emotion-inducing video clips vs. Neutral video clips was evaluated on Difference in heart rate (HR) between emotion-inducing and neutral videos (p=0.005). Men exhibited larger heart rate decreases for anger, amusement, and pleasure videos, whereas women reported higher emotional expressivity, particularly for negative emotions.
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