Mood induction through imitation of full‐body movements with different affective intentions

Author:

Schmidt Eva‐Madeleine123ORCID,Smith Rebecca A.4ORCID,Fernández Andrés5ORCID,Emmermann Birte6ORCID,Christensen Julia F.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cognitive Neuropsychology Max‐Planck‐Institute for Empirical Aesthetics Frankfurt am Main Germany

2. Department of Language and Literature Max‐Planck‐Institute for Empirical Aesthetics Frankfurt am Main Germany

3. Max Planck School of Cognition Leipzig Germany

4. Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

5. Centre for Vision, Speech and Signal Processing University of Surrey Guildford UK

6. Chair of Ergonomics Technical University of Munich Munich Germany

Abstract

AbstractTheories of human emotion, including some emotion embodiment theories, suggest that our moods and affective states are reflected in the movements of our bodies. We used the reverse process for mood regulation; modulate body movements to regulate mood. Dancing is a type of full‐body movement characterized by affective expressivity and, hence, offers the possibility to express different affective states through the same movement sequences. We tested whether the repeated imitation of a dancer performing two simple full‐body dance movement sequences with different affective expressivity (happy or sad) could change mood states. Computer‐based systems, using avatars as dance models to imitate, offer a series of advantages such as independence from physical contact and location. Therefore, we compared mood induction effects in two conditions: participants were asked to imitate dance movements from one of the two avatars showing: (a) videos of a human dancer model or (b) videos of a robot dancer model. The mood induction was successful for both happy and sad imitations, regardless of condition (human vs. robot avatar dance model). Moreover, the magnitude of happy mood induction and how much participants liked the task predicted work‐related motivation after the mood induction. We conclude that mood regulation through dance movements is possible and beneficial in the work context.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Psychology

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