Over 125 years ago, Charles Darwin (1872) suggested that the only way to fully understand the form and function of human facial expression was to make comparisons with other species. Nevertheless, it has been only recently that facial expressions in humans and related primate species have been compared using systematic, anatomically based techniques. Through this approach, large-scale evolutionary and phylogenetic analyses of facial expressions, including their homology, can now be addressed. Here, the development of a muscular based system for measuring facial movement in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) is described based on the well-known FACS (Facial Action Coding System) and ChimpFACS. These systems describe facial movement according t...
Independently, we created descriptive systems to characterize chimpanzee facial behavior, responding...
The Orangutan Facial Action Coding System (OrangFACS) is an observational tool for identifying and c...
Objectives: While it has been demonstrated that even subtle variation in human facial expressions ca...
Over 125 years ago, Charles Darwin (1872) suggested that the only way to fully understand the form a...
The rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) is the most utilized primate model in the biomedical and psychol...
Facial expressions are complex and subtle signals, central for communication and emotion in social m...
Human and non-human primates exhibit facial movements or displays to communicate with one another. T...
The evolution and function of human and nonhuman primate facial expression can be better understood ...
Facial expressions are subtle cues, central for communication and conveying emotions in mammals. Tra...
A comparative perspective has remained central to the study of human facial expressions since Darwin...
Darwin and other pioneering scholars made comparisons between human facial signals and those of non-...
Primates communicate in several ways by using multi-modal signals. Recently, researchers have start...
Facial expressions are subtle cues, central for communication and conveying emotions in mammals. Tra...
Facial expression is a common mode of visual communication in mammals but especially so in primates....
The aim of this study was to evaluate the main contexts of occurrence and the possible functions att...
Independently, we created descriptive systems to characterize chimpanzee facial behavior, responding...
The Orangutan Facial Action Coding System (OrangFACS) is an observational tool for identifying and c...
Objectives: While it has been demonstrated that even subtle variation in human facial expressions ca...
Over 125 years ago, Charles Darwin (1872) suggested that the only way to fully understand the form a...
The rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) is the most utilized primate model in the biomedical and psychol...
Facial expressions are complex and subtle signals, central for communication and emotion in social m...
Human and non-human primates exhibit facial movements or displays to communicate with one another. T...
The evolution and function of human and nonhuman primate facial expression can be better understood ...
Facial expressions are subtle cues, central for communication and conveying emotions in mammals. Tra...
A comparative perspective has remained central to the study of human facial expressions since Darwin...
Darwin and other pioneering scholars made comparisons between human facial signals and those of non-...
Primates communicate in several ways by using multi-modal signals. Recently, researchers have start...
Facial expressions are subtle cues, central for communication and conveying emotions in mammals. Tra...
Facial expression is a common mode of visual communication in mammals but especially so in primates....
The aim of this study was to evaluate the main contexts of occurrence and the possible functions att...
Independently, we created descriptive systems to characterize chimpanzee facial behavior, responding...
The Orangutan Facial Action Coding System (OrangFACS) is an observational tool for identifying and c...
Objectives: While it has been demonstrated that even subtle variation in human facial expressions ca...