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David Matsumoto

Researcher at San Francisco State University

Publications -  196
Citations -  14228

David Matsumoto is an academic researcher from San Francisco State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Facial expression & Emotional expression. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 191 publications receiving 13028 citations. Previous affiliations of David Matsumoto include Wright Institute & University of San Francisco.

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Personality and beliefs about the world revisited: Expanding the nomological network of social axioms

TL;DR: The relationship between personality and beliefs about the world by employing both universally applicable and indigenously derived measures of personality along with the Social Axioms Survey was evaluated by as mentioned in this paper.
Book

Unmasking Japan: Myths and Realities About the Emotions of the Japanese

TL;DR: Faces of Aging foregrounds a spectrum of elder-centered issues-social activity, caregiving, generational bias, suicide, sexuality, and communication with medical professionals, to name a few-from the perspective of those who are living them.
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Preschoolers' Moral Actions and Emotions in Prisoner's Dilemma

TL;DR: The moral acts of 19 dyads of 4-year-olds in a cognitively simplified version of Prisoner's Dilemma were analyzed in relationship to their friendship, emotions, and processes of conflict resolution as discussed by the authors.
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Sequential Dynamics of Culturally Moderated Facial Expressions of Emotion

TL;DR: The emotional displays of Olympic athletes across time were examined, their expressive styles were classified, and the association between those styles and a number of characteristics associated with the countries the athletes represented were tested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Facial expression analysis

David Matsumoto, +1 more
- 15 May 2008 - 
TL;DR: The VIIth cranial nerve includes a motor root that supplies somatic muscle fibers to the muscles of the face, scalp, and outer ear, enabling the muscle movements that comprise facial expressions.