16:30 - 18:00
Parallel sessions 3
16:30 - 18:00
Room: HSZ - N9
Chair/s:
Martin Maier, Julia Baum
Recent technological and cultural change has introduced new and fast-evolving challenges to social perception and evaluation. Deepfakes, misinformation, artificial agents, and other technologically mediated phenomena pose novel inputs to these systems, and the psychological mechanisms through which perceivers interpret, believe, and evaluate them remain incompletely understood. 
This symposium examines these issues through the lens of the beholder’s share: the extent to which what we “see” in others—including artificial agents—is shaped by predictions grounded in prior knowledge, beliefs, and emotional context. The psychology of the perceiver matters ever more as technologies produce increasingly convincing social signals, such that beliefs and contextual cues—like knowing an image is fake—become distinctive factors in determining their impact.
Emotion plays a central role across the five presentations, each addressing how affective meaning interacts with belief and authenticity in social cognition. Julia Baum’s talk examines EEG correlates of social evaluation under potential misinformation, identifying neural markers of susceptibility and effective intervention. Alexander Leonhardt investigates how intentionality evoked by affective knowledge and robot appearance jointly shape mind attribution and moral-emotional evaluation of humanoid robots. Martin Maier’s presentation explores how emotionally relevant deepfake faces and scenes influence neural responses and evaluations, revealing asymmetries in how positive versus negative content is discounted when believed to be artificial. Annika Ziereis will show behavioral and EEG data examining the processing of naturally photographed or AI-generated facial expressions, evaluating how the actual and perceived authenticity of the emotional cues influences neural and behavioral responses. Finally, Jana Vanek turns to the mechanisms of social-perceptual change itself, showing through EEG studies of meme-like humor how new contextual information can trigger sudden perspective shifts and reorganize social meaning in real time.
Together, these investigations illuminate how emotions, beliefs, and expectations guide perception in increasingly uncertain and often artificially social environments. By focusing on the interplay between psychological processes and cultural-technological transformations, the symposium aims to advance understanding of how humans navigate authenticity, agency, and moral evaluation in a rapidly changing social world.
Submission 377
From Aha to Haha: Sudden Insight, Humor, and the Neural Dynamics of Social Perception
SymposiumTalk-05
Presented by: Jana Vanek
Jana Vanek 1, Martin Maier 1, 2, Rasha Abdel Rahman 1, 2
1 Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany
2 Science of Intelligence, Research Cluster of Excellence, Technical University of Berlin, Germany

With the rise of social media and meme culture, new ways of contextualizing social visual stimuli have become ubiquitous. In captioned humor, for instance, a single line can instantly reframe a visual scene and reshape the mental states we attribute to depicted persons. This phenomenon offers a powerful test case for the active, constructive nature of social perception, which flexibly integrates context and acquired meaning. This talk presents an EEG study investigating how sudden insight—and the accompanying experience of funniness—modulate perceptual, semantic, and emotional processing of social stimuli. Across three experimental phases (pre-insight, insight, post-insight), 40 participants viewed images of 120 “memeable” scenes showing public figures. During the insight phase, humorous captions were presented that either matched or mismatched the subsequent image, and participants indicated whether the caption-image pair produced an insight or not. In a separate block, they rated each item’s funniness. Using event-related potentials, we investigated differences between trials with and without sudden insight, including changes in the N170, early posterior negativity (EPN), N400, and late positive component (LPC). New preliminary findings incorporating subjective ratings of funniness explore the relative influences of cognitive insight and affective humor on visual, semantic, and emotional processing as they unfold in real time. These findings highlight the neural mechanisms through which new contextual information can rapidly reshape social meaning. In doing so, they contribute to a better understanding of how emotions, beliefs, and expectations guide perception in an increasingly complex and technologically mediated social world.