The ability to recognize facial expressions of basic emotions is often considered a universal human ability. However, recent studies have suggested that this commonality has been overestimated and that people from different cultures use different facial signals to represent expressions (Jack, Blais, Scheepers, Schyns, & Caldara, 2009; Jack, Caldara, & Schyns, 2012). We investigated this possibility by examining similarities and differences in the perception and categorization of facial expressions between Chinese and white British participants using whole-face and partial-face images. Our results showed no cultural difference in the patterns of perceptual similarity of expressions from whole-face images. When categorizing the same expressio...
Six ‘universal’ facial expressions – ‘Happy,’ ‘Surprise,’ ‘Fear,’ ‘Disgust,’ ‘Anger,’ and ‘Sadness’ ...
Facial expressions have long been considered the "universal language of emotion". Yet consistent cul...
Previous research, which has used images of real human faces and mostly from the same facial express...
Facial expressions of emotion have been assumed to be innate, discrete, and universal across culture...
Facial expressions are crucial to human social communication, but the extent to which they are innat...
A range of research has shown an advantage for the perception of faces from same-race compared to ot...
We recently (Jack et al., 2009) challenged one of the most widely held beliefs in psychological rese...
Face processing and emotion recognition are often focal points in psychological research, but seldom...
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 ...
It is well established that East Asians (Easterners) are poorer at categorizing some emotional facia...
SummaryCentral to all human interaction is the mutual understanding of emotions, achieved primarily ...
Cross-cultural research on the recognition of facial expressions of emotions have shown that the pr...
Six ‘universal’ facial expressions – ‘Happy,’ ‘Surprise,’ ‘Fear,’ ‘Disgust,’ ‘Anger,’ and ‘Sadness’ ...
Emotions are universally recognized from facial expressions—or so it has been claimed. To support th...
Six ‘universal’ facial expressions – ‘Happy,’ ‘Surprise,’ ‘Fear,’ ‘Disgust,’ ‘Anger,’ and ‘Sadness’ ...
Facial expressions have long been considered the "universal language of emotion". Yet consistent cul...
Previous research, which has used images of real human faces and mostly from the same facial express...
Facial expressions of emotion have been assumed to be innate, discrete, and universal across culture...
Facial expressions are crucial to human social communication, but the extent to which they are innat...
A range of research has shown an advantage for the perception of faces from same-race compared to ot...
We recently (Jack et al., 2009) challenged one of the most widely held beliefs in psychological rese...
Face processing and emotion recognition are often focal points in psychological research, but seldom...
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 ...
It is well established that East Asians (Easterners) are poorer at categorizing some emotional facia...
SummaryCentral to all human interaction is the mutual understanding of emotions, achieved primarily ...
Cross-cultural research on the recognition of facial expressions of emotions have shown that the pr...
Six ‘universal’ facial expressions – ‘Happy,’ ‘Surprise,’ ‘Fear,’ ‘Disgust,’ ‘Anger,’ and ‘Sadness’ ...
Emotions are universally recognized from facial expressions—or so it has been claimed. To support th...
Six ‘universal’ facial expressions – ‘Happy,’ ‘Surprise,’ ‘Fear,’ ‘Disgust,’ ‘Anger,’ and ‘Sadness’ ...
Facial expressions have long been considered the "universal language of emotion". Yet consistent cul...
Previous research, which has used images of real human faces and mostly from the same facial express...