Facial mimicry, the automatic imitation of another person's emotion, is a mechanism underlying emotion recognition and emotional contagion, a phylogenetically conserved form of empathy that precedes later developing empathic skills. We tested the possibility to increase facial mimicry by blurring self-other distinction via the enfacement illusion. To do so we delivered synchronous, versus asynchronous, visuo-tactile interpersonal multisensory stimulation on the observer and expresser's faces and then recorded surface facial EMG while participants observed videos of happy and sad facial expressions displayed by the expresser. Our results show that synchronous visuo-tactile stimulation can indeed enhance facial mimicry and that this depends o...
<div><p>Enfacement is an illusion wherein synchronous visual and tactile inputs update the mental re...
Emotional mimicry refers to the tendency to mimic other's emotions in order to share minds. We prese...
“Enfacement” occurs when participants incorporate another’s face into their self-face representation...
A number of studies have shown that individuals often spontaneously mimic the facial expressions of ...
Drimalla H, Landwehr N, Hess U, Dziobek I. From face to face: the contribution of facial mimicry to ...
Facial expressions signal emotions and influence social interactions. One mechanism hypothesized to ...
People tend to automatically imitate others’ facial expressions of emotion. That reaction, termed “f...
Since the 1970's, when it was discovered that emotions are expressed similarly by people of differen...
Joint attention (JA) and spontaneous facial mimicry (SFM) are fundamental processes in social intera...
People tend to mimic the facial expression of others. It has been suggested that this helps provide ...
Facial expressions play a fundamental role in social interactions, as demonstrated by our spontaneou...
A number of studies have shown that individuals often spontaneously mimic the facial expressions of ...
Item does not contain fulltextHuman mimicry is ubiquitous, and often occurs without the awareness of...
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Simulation models of facial expressions suggest that posterior visual areas and ...
Enfacement is an illusion wherein synchronous visual and tactile inputs update the mental representa...
<div><p>Enfacement is an illusion wherein synchronous visual and tactile inputs update the mental re...
Emotional mimicry refers to the tendency to mimic other's emotions in order to share minds. We prese...
“Enfacement” occurs when participants incorporate another’s face into their self-face representation...
A number of studies have shown that individuals often spontaneously mimic the facial expressions of ...
Drimalla H, Landwehr N, Hess U, Dziobek I. From face to face: the contribution of facial mimicry to ...
Facial expressions signal emotions and influence social interactions. One mechanism hypothesized to ...
People tend to automatically imitate others’ facial expressions of emotion. That reaction, termed “f...
Since the 1970's, when it was discovered that emotions are expressed similarly by people of differen...
Joint attention (JA) and spontaneous facial mimicry (SFM) are fundamental processes in social intera...
People tend to mimic the facial expression of others. It has been suggested that this helps provide ...
Facial expressions play a fundamental role in social interactions, as demonstrated by our spontaneou...
A number of studies have shown that individuals often spontaneously mimic the facial expressions of ...
Item does not contain fulltextHuman mimicry is ubiquitous, and often occurs without the awareness of...
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Simulation models of facial expressions suggest that posterior visual areas and ...
Enfacement is an illusion wherein synchronous visual and tactile inputs update the mental representa...
<div><p>Enfacement is an illusion wherein synchronous visual and tactile inputs update the mental re...
Emotional mimicry refers to the tendency to mimic other's emotions in order to share minds. We prese...
“Enfacement” occurs when participants incorporate another’s face into their self-face representation...