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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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The handbook of culture and psychology.

TL;DR: The second edition of the Oxford Handbook of Culture and Psychology conveys the impact that the contributions of cultural and cross-cultural psychology have made to the field's understanding of the relation between culture and psychology as discussed by the authors.
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A New Test to Measure Emotion Recognition Ability: Matsumoto and Ekman's Japanese and Caucasian Brief Affect Recognition Test (JACBART)

TL;DR: The Japanese and Caucasian Brief Affect Recognition Test (JACBART) as discussed by the authors is a test designed to measure individual differences in emotion recognition ability (ERA), five studies examined the reliability and validity of the scores produced using this test, and the first evidence for a correlation between ERA measured by a standardized test and personality.
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Ethnic differences in affect intensity, emotion judgments, display rule attitudes, and self-reported emotional expression in an American sample

TL;DR: In this paper, American subjects were self-classified into one of four ethnic groups, and provided with data concerning affect intensity, display rule attitudes, self-reported emotional expression, emotion labeling, and intensity ratings.
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Variations of emotional display rules within and across cultures: A comparison between Canada, USA, and Japan.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared emotional display rules of Canadian, US Americans, and Japanese across cultures regarding the specific emotion, the type of interaction partner, and gender, finding that Japanese display rules permit the expression of powerful (anger, contempt, and disgust) significantly less than those of the two North American samples.
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American-Japanese Cultural Differences in the Recognition of Universal Facial Expressions

TL;DR: This article examined how cultures differ in the degree to which they perceive the universal emotions accurately, and found substantial and consistent differences according to the culture of the judges and the emotion portrayed, in terms of stable cultural dimensions that may influence the perception of emotion.