It is commonly assumed that a person’s emotional state can be readily inferred from his or her facial movements, typically called emotional expressions or facial expressions. This assumption influences legal judgments, policy decisions, national security protocols, and educational practices; guides the diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric illness, as well as the development of commercial applications; and pervades everyday social interactions as well as research in other scientific fields such as artificial intelligence, neuroscience, and computer vision. In this article, we survey examples of this widespread assumption, which we refer to as the common view, and we then examine the scientific evidence that tests this view, focusing on the...
One of the most fascinating characteristics of emotions is that they have universal expressive patte...
Traditional models of face processing posit independent pathways for the processing of facial identi...
The rapid detection of facial expressions of anger or threat has obvious adaptive value. In this stu...
It is commonly assumed that a person’s emotional state can be readily inferred from his or her facia...
It is commonly assumed that a person’s emotional state can be readily inferred from his or her facia...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2...
Emotions are universally recognized from facial expressions—or so it has been claimed. To support th...
Do we see every facial expression from people with whom we come into contact? By replicating an expe...
Human beings process information in all different ways, but one of the first ways is through facial ...
Compared to other species, humans have developed highly sophisticated communication systems for soci...
That basic emotions produce a facial signal would -if true- provide a foundation for a science of em...
The aim of the present study was to investigate which affective component guides cognitive processin...
One of the defining attributes of the human species is sophisticated communication, for which facial...
tion approaches to facial movements, focusing on Ekman’s (1972) and Fridlund’s (1994) contrasting mo...
Certain facial expressions have been theorized to be easily recognizable signals of specific emotion...
One of the most fascinating characteristics of emotions is that they have universal expressive patte...
Traditional models of face processing posit independent pathways for the processing of facial identi...
The rapid detection of facial expressions of anger or threat has obvious adaptive value. In this stu...
It is commonly assumed that a person’s emotional state can be readily inferred from his or her facia...
It is commonly assumed that a person’s emotional state can be readily inferred from his or her facia...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2...
Emotions are universally recognized from facial expressions—or so it has been claimed. To support th...
Do we see every facial expression from people with whom we come into contact? By replicating an expe...
Human beings process information in all different ways, but one of the first ways is through facial ...
Compared to other species, humans have developed highly sophisticated communication systems for soci...
That basic emotions produce a facial signal would -if true- provide a foundation for a science of em...
The aim of the present study was to investigate which affective component guides cognitive processin...
One of the defining attributes of the human species is sophisticated communication, for which facial...
tion approaches to facial movements, focusing on Ekman’s (1972) and Fridlund’s (1994) contrasting mo...
Certain facial expressions have been theorized to be easily recognizable signals of specific emotion...
One of the most fascinating characteristics of emotions is that they have universal expressive patte...
Traditional models of face processing posit independent pathways for the processing of facial identi...
The rapid detection of facial expressions of anger or threat has obvious adaptive value. In this stu...