Emotional mimicry refers to the tendency to mimic other's emotions in order to share minds. We present new evidence that supports our Contextual Model of Emotional Mimicry, showing that emotional mimicry serves affiliative goals that vary across social contexts. This also implies the opposite, namely that we (unconsciously) refrain from mimicking others' emotions if we want to keep emotional distance. Facial mimicry of emotions is further suggested to be a largely top-down process, based on goals and representations, rather than on mere watching others' facial movements
International audiencePeople often spontaneously engage in copying each other's postures and manneri...
Facial expressions play a fundamental role in social interactions, as demonstrated by our spontaneou...
One striking characteristic of human social interactions is unconscious mimicry; people have a tende...
Emotional mimicry is the imitation of the emotional expressions of others. According to the classic ...
Facial mimicry—the imitation of the facial expressions of others—has been regarded as one of the und...
Facial expressions signal emotions and influence social interactions. One mechanism hypothesized to ...
A number of studies have shown that individuals often spontaneously mimic the facial expressions of ...
Human mimicry is ubiquitous, and often occurs without the awareness of the person mimicking or the p...
In interpersonal encounters, individuals often exhibit changes in their own facial expressions in re...
Mimicry is functional for empathy and bonding purposes. Studies on the consequences of mimicry at a ...
Drimalla H, Landwehr N, Hess U, Dziobek I. From face to face: the contribution of facial mimicry to ...
Mimicry has been ascribed affiliative functions. In three experiments, we used a newly developed soc...
The present studies investigated whether mimicry effects on empathizing depend on whether emotional ...
Mimicry has been ascribed affiliative functions. In three experiments, we used a newly developed soc...
A recent review on facial mimicry concludes that emotional mimicry is less ubiquitous than has been ...
International audiencePeople often spontaneously engage in copying each other's postures and manneri...
Facial expressions play a fundamental role in social interactions, as demonstrated by our spontaneou...
One striking characteristic of human social interactions is unconscious mimicry; people have a tende...
Emotional mimicry is the imitation of the emotional expressions of others. According to the classic ...
Facial mimicry—the imitation of the facial expressions of others—has been regarded as one of the und...
Facial expressions signal emotions and influence social interactions. One mechanism hypothesized to ...
A number of studies have shown that individuals often spontaneously mimic the facial expressions of ...
Human mimicry is ubiquitous, and often occurs without the awareness of the person mimicking or the p...
In interpersonal encounters, individuals often exhibit changes in their own facial expressions in re...
Mimicry is functional for empathy and bonding purposes. Studies on the consequences of mimicry at a ...
Drimalla H, Landwehr N, Hess U, Dziobek I. From face to face: the contribution of facial mimicry to ...
Mimicry has been ascribed affiliative functions. In three experiments, we used a newly developed soc...
The present studies investigated whether mimicry effects on empathizing depend on whether emotional ...
Mimicry has been ascribed affiliative functions. In three experiments, we used a newly developed soc...
A recent review on facial mimicry concludes that emotional mimicry is less ubiquitous than has been ...
International audiencePeople often spontaneously engage in copying each other's postures and manneri...
Facial expressions play a fundamental role in social interactions, as demonstrated by our spontaneou...
One striking characteristic of human social interactions is unconscious mimicry; people have a tende...