In human-to-human contexts, display rules provide an empirically sound construct to explain intercultural differences in emotional expressivity. A very prominent finding in this regard is that cultures rooted in collectivism—such as China, South Korea, or Japan—uphold norms of emotional suppression, contrasting with ideals of unfiltered self-expression found in several Western societies. However, other studies have shown that collectivistic cultures do not actually disregard the whole spectrum of emotional expression, but simply prefer displays of socially engaging emotions (e.g., trust, shame) over the more disengaging expressions favored by the West (e.g., pride, anger). Inspired by the constant advancement of affective technology, this s...
Although the effect of context on cognition is observable across cultures, preliminary findings sugg...
This paper addresses a basic issue impacting on the design of user interfaces for cooperative workin...
Facial expressions have long been considered the "universal language of emotion". Yet consistent cul...
In human-to-human contexts, display rules provide an empirically sound construct to explain intercul...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
Facial expressions are crucial to human social communication, but the extent to which they are innat...
Previous research, which has used images of real human faces and mostly from the same facial express...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
Face processing and emotion recognition are often focal points in psychological research, but seldom...
It is well established that East Asians (Easterners) are poorer at categorizing some emotional facia...
Since Darwin’s seminal works, the universality of facial expressions of emotion has remained one of ...
Background: This article substantiates the necessity to study the emotion recognition in cross-cultu...
Evidence that culture modulates on-line neural responses to the emotional meanings encoded by vocal ...
According to the Universality Hypothesis, facial expressions of emotion comprise a universal set of ...
Quickly and accurately recognizing emotional cues in a collective, referred to as emotional aperture...
Although the effect of context on cognition is observable across cultures, preliminary findings sugg...
This paper addresses a basic issue impacting on the design of user interfaces for cooperative workin...
Facial expressions have long been considered the "universal language of emotion". Yet consistent cul...
In human-to-human contexts, display rules provide an empirically sound construct to explain intercul...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
Facial expressions are crucial to human social communication, but the extent to which they are innat...
Previous research, which has used images of real human faces and mostly from the same facial express...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
Face processing and emotion recognition are often focal points in psychological research, but seldom...
It is well established that East Asians (Easterners) are poorer at categorizing some emotional facia...
Since Darwin’s seminal works, the universality of facial expressions of emotion has remained one of ...
Background: This article substantiates the necessity to study the emotion recognition in cross-cultu...
Evidence that culture modulates on-line neural responses to the emotional meanings encoded by vocal ...
According to the Universality Hypothesis, facial expressions of emotion comprise a universal set of ...
Quickly and accurately recognizing emotional cues in a collective, referred to as emotional aperture...
Although the effect of context on cognition is observable across cultures, preliminary findings sugg...
This paper addresses a basic issue impacting on the design of user interfaces for cooperative workin...
Facial expressions have long been considered the "universal language of emotion". Yet consistent cul...