Facial expressions have long been considered the "universal language of emotion". Yet consistent cultural differences in the recognition of facial expressions contradict such notions (e.g., R. E. Jack, C. Blais, C. Scheepers, P. G. Schyns, & R. Caldara, 2009). Rather, culture—as an intricate system of social concepts and beliefs—could generate different expectations (i.e., internal representations) of facial expression signals. To investigate, they used a powerful psychophysical technique (reverse correlation) to estimate the observer-specific internal representations of the 6 basic facial expressions of emotion (i.e., happy, surprise, fear, disgust, anger, and sad) in two culturally distinct groups (i.e., Western Caucasian [WC] and Eas...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
With over a century of theoretical developments and empirical investigation in broad fields (e.g., a...
We present here new evidence of cross-cultural agreement in the judgment of facial expression. Subje...
We recently (Jack et al., 2009) challenged one of the most widely held beliefs in psychological rese...
According to the Universality Hypothesis, facial expressions of emotion comprise a universal set of ...
According to the Universality Hypothesis, facial expressions of emotion comprise a universal set of ...
Since Darwin’s seminal works, the universality of facial expressions of emotion has remained one of ...
Central to all human interaction is the mutual understanding of emotions, achieved primarily by a se...
SummaryCentral to all human interaction is the mutual understanding of emotions, achieved primarily ...
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...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
One of the most fascinating characteristics of emotions is that they have universal expressive patte...
Emotions are universally recognized from facial expressions—or so it has been claimed. To support th...
With over a century of theoretical developments and empirical investigation in broad fields (e.g., a...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
With over a century of theoretical developments and empirical investigation in broad fields (e.g., a...
We present here new evidence of cross-cultural agreement in the judgment of facial expression. Subje...
We recently (Jack et al., 2009) challenged one of the most widely held beliefs in psychological rese...
According to the Universality Hypothesis, facial expressions of emotion comprise a universal set of ...
According to the Universality Hypothesis, facial expressions of emotion comprise a universal set of ...
Since Darwin’s seminal works, the universality of facial expressions of emotion has remained one of ...
Central to all human interaction is the mutual understanding of emotions, achieved primarily by a se...
SummaryCentral to all human interaction is the mutual understanding of emotions, achieved primarily ...
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...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
One of the most fascinating characteristics of emotions is that they have universal expressive patte...
Emotions are universally recognized from facial expressions—or so it has been claimed. To support th...
With over a century of theoretical developments and empirical investigation in broad fields (e.g., a...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
With over a century of theoretical developments and empirical investigation in broad fields (e.g., a...
We present here new evidence of cross-cultural agreement in the judgment of facial expression. Subje...