Abstract
The ability of adults with mental retardation to express facial emotions of happiness, sadness, anger, and fear was investigated. Photographs of facial emotional expressions posed by adults classified as mentally retarded were judged by familiar and unfamiliar adults who were not mentally retarded. Happiness and sadness were accurately posed most often. The ability of adults with mental retardation to encode facial emotional expressions was correlated with assessments of interpersonal competence provided by work supervisors. Implications of the findings of this study for nonverbal social | emotional assessment, nonverbal interpersonal skills training, and future research are discussed.
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