Emotional facial expressions are thought to have evolved because they play a crucial role in species’ survival. From infancy, humans develop dedicated neural circuits to exhibit and recognize a variety of facial expressions. But there is increasing evidence that culture specifies when and how certain emotions can be expressed — social norms — and that the mature perceptual mechanisms used to transmit and decode the visual information from emotional signals differ between Western and Eastern adults. Specifically, the mouth is more informative for transmitting emotional signals in Westerners and the eye region for Easterners, generating culturespecific fixation biases towards these features. During development, it is recognized that cultural ...
European American, Japanese, and Chinese 11-month-olds participated in emotion-inducing labora-tory ...
The emergence of cultural differences in face scanning is thought to be shaped by social experience....
Researchers have proposed that the culture in which we are raised shapes the way that we attend to t...
The perception of multisensory emotion cues is affected by culture. For example, East Asians rely mo...
Perception and eye movements are affected by culture. Adults from Eastern societies (e.g. China) dis...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
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...
A myriad of emotion perception studies has shown infants’ ability to discriminate different emotiona...
Recent studies have demonstrated that multisensory emotion perception is modulated by culture. Tanak...
Facial expressions have long been considered the "universal language of emotion". Yet consistent cul...
The development of specialised face processing is shaped by postnatal social experience. Previous li...
International audiencePerceptual narrowing has been observed in human infants for other-race faces. ...
Since Darwin’s seminal works, the universality of facial expressions of emotion has remained one of ...
Previous research has demonstrated that the way human adults look at others ’ faces is modulated by ...
European American, Japanese, and Chinese 11-month-olds participated in emotion-inducing labora-tory ...
The emergence of cultural differences in face scanning is thought to be shaped by social experience....
Researchers have proposed that the culture in which we are raised shapes the way that we attend to t...
The perception of multisensory emotion cues is affected by culture. For example, East Asians rely mo...
Perception and eye movements are affected by culture. Adults from Eastern societies (e.g. China) dis...
Despite consistently documented cultural differences in the perception of facial expressions of emot...
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...
A myriad of emotion perception studies has shown infants’ ability to discriminate different emotiona...
Recent studies have demonstrated that multisensory emotion perception is modulated by culture. Tanak...
Facial expressions have long been considered the "universal language of emotion". Yet consistent cul...
The development of specialised face processing is shaped by postnatal social experience. Previous li...
International audiencePerceptual narrowing has been observed in human infants for other-race faces. ...
Since Darwin’s seminal works, the universality of facial expressions of emotion has remained one of ...
Previous research has demonstrated that the way human adults look at others ’ faces is modulated by ...
European American, Japanese, and Chinese 11-month-olds participated in emotion-inducing labora-tory ...
The emergence of cultural differences in face scanning is thought to be shaped by social experience....
Researchers have proposed that the culture in which we are raised shapes the way that we attend to t...