Unconscious processing of facial race and emotional information

Abstract Facial information plays a significant role in social interactions. However, the extent to which racial information and emotional information in faces can be processed under unconscious conditions has been a matter of debate. This study utilized the breaking Continuous Flash Suppression (b-...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhi Quan, Xinchao Yang, Wenpei Pan, Ruoxi Wang, Danyang Cui, Qiang Xu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-07-01
Series:BMC Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-02906-7
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849238203809136640
author Zhi Quan
Xinchao Yang
Wenpei Pan
Ruoxi Wang
Danyang Cui
Qiang Xu
author_facet Zhi Quan
Xinchao Yang
Wenpei Pan
Ruoxi Wang
Danyang Cui
Qiang Xu
author_sort Zhi Quan
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Facial information plays a significant role in social interactions. However, the extent to which racial information and emotional information in faces can be processed under unconscious conditions has been a matter of debate. This study utilized the breaking Continuous Flash Suppression (b-CFS) paradigm to investigate whether racial information and emotional information in faces could be processed unconsciously, and whether these different types of information might influence each other. By comparing the suppression-breaking response times of angry, neutral, and happy faces across same-race and cross-race conditions, our findings revealed that participants exhibited significantly shorter response times for cross-race faces compared to same-race faces, indicating an unconscious processing advantage for cross-race stimuli. Furthermore, angry and happy faces demonstrated significantly shorter suppression-breaking response times than neutral faces, with happy faces breaking suppression faster than angry faces. Importantly, for same-race faces, the response times for angry and happy faces were shorter compared to neutral faces. But for other-race faces, happy faces exhibited a significantly shorter response times compared to both neutral and angry faces, while there was no significant difference between neutral and angry faces. These results suggested that both racial and emotional information could be processed unconsciously, and that these two types of information could influence each other under unconscious conditions.
format Article
id doaj-art-22f2b2256ff44845b612aa7cef1ecc36
institution Kabale University
issn 2050-7283
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series BMC Psychology
spelling doaj-art-22f2b2256ff44845b612aa7cef1ecc362025-08-20T04:01:42ZengBMCBMC Psychology2050-72832025-07-0113111110.1186/s40359-025-02906-7Unconscious processing of facial race and emotional informationZhi Quan0Xinchao Yang1Wenpei Pan2Ruoxi Wang3Danyang Cui4Qiang Xu5Department of Psychology, Ningbo UniversityDepartment of Psychology, Ningbo UniversityDepartment of Psychology, Ningbo UniversityDepartment of Psychology, Ningbo UniversityDepartment of Psychology, Ningbo UniversityDepartment of Psychology, Ningbo UniversityAbstract Facial information plays a significant role in social interactions. However, the extent to which racial information and emotional information in faces can be processed under unconscious conditions has been a matter of debate. This study utilized the breaking Continuous Flash Suppression (b-CFS) paradigm to investigate whether racial information and emotional information in faces could be processed unconsciously, and whether these different types of information might influence each other. By comparing the suppression-breaking response times of angry, neutral, and happy faces across same-race and cross-race conditions, our findings revealed that participants exhibited significantly shorter response times for cross-race faces compared to same-race faces, indicating an unconscious processing advantage for cross-race stimuli. Furthermore, angry and happy faces demonstrated significantly shorter suppression-breaking response times than neutral faces, with happy faces breaking suppression faster than angry faces. Importantly, for same-race faces, the response times for angry and happy faces were shorter compared to neutral faces. But for other-race faces, happy faces exhibited a significantly shorter response times compared to both neutral and angry faces, while there was no significant difference between neutral and angry faces. These results suggested that both racial and emotional information could be processed unconsciously, and that these two types of information could influence each other under unconscious conditions.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-02906-7Unconscious processingBreaking continuous flash suppression paradigmFacial emotionRacial information
spellingShingle Zhi Quan
Xinchao Yang
Wenpei Pan
Ruoxi Wang
Danyang Cui
Qiang Xu
Unconscious processing of facial race and emotional information
BMC Psychology
Unconscious processing
Breaking continuous flash suppression paradigm
Facial emotion
Racial information
title Unconscious processing of facial race and emotional information
title_full Unconscious processing of facial race and emotional information
title_fullStr Unconscious processing of facial race and emotional information
title_full_unstemmed Unconscious processing of facial race and emotional information
title_short Unconscious processing of facial race and emotional information
title_sort unconscious processing of facial race and emotional information
topic Unconscious processing
Breaking continuous flash suppression paradigm
Facial emotion
Racial information
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-02906-7
work_keys_str_mv AT zhiquan unconsciousprocessingoffacialraceandemotionalinformation
AT xinchaoyang unconsciousprocessingoffacialraceandemotionalinformation
AT wenpeipan unconsciousprocessingoffacialraceandemotionalinformation
AT ruoxiwang unconsciousprocessingoffacialraceandemotionalinformation
AT danyangcui unconsciousprocessingoffacialraceandemotionalinformation
AT qiangxu unconsciousprocessingoffacialraceandemotionalinformation