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Journal ArticleDOI

Electromyographic activity over facial muscle regions can differentiate the valence and intensity of affective reactions.

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TLDR
In this article, facial electromyographic (EMG) activity was used to distinguish both the valence and intensity of the affective reaction to the visual stimuli, and independent judges were unable to determine from viewing videotapes of the subjects' facial displays whether a positive or negative stimulus had been presented or whether a mildly or moderately intense stimulus was presented.
Abstract
Physiological measures have traditionally been viewed in social psychology as useful only in assessing general arousal and therefore as incapable of distinguishing between positive and negative affective states. This view is challenged in the present report. Sixteen subjects in a pilot study were exposed briefly to slides and tones that were mildly to moderately evocative of positive and negative affect. Facial electromyographic (EMG) activity differentiated both the valence and intensity of the affective reaction. Moreover, independent judges were unable to determine from viewing videotapes of the subjects' facial displays whether a positive or negative stimulus had been presented or whether a mildly or moderately intense stimulus had been presented. In the full experiment, 28 subjects briefly viewed slides of scenes that were mildly to moderately evocative of positive and negative affect. Again, EMG activity over the brow (corrugator supercilia), eye (orbicularis oculi), and cheek (zygomatic major) muscle regions differentiated the pleasantness and intensity of individuals' affective reactions to the visual stimuli even though visual inspection of the videotapes again indicated that expressions of emotion were not apparent. These results suggest that gradients of EMG activity over the muscles of facial expression can provide objective and continuous probes of affective processes that are too subtle or fleeting to evoke expressions observable under normal conditions of social interaction.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Fearfulness and Startle Potentiation during Aversive Visual Stimuli

TL;DR: The results support the hypothesis that affective modulation of startle is enhanced among high fear compared to low fear subjects and suggest that this individual difference effect generalizes across psychophysiological components of the startle reflex and diverse procedures for manipulating affect.
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Psychophysiological response patterns to positive and negative film stimuli.

TL;DR: There is a tendency of a greater coherence of emotional response components in generalized anxiety subjects, and spontaneous facial expressions to positive and negative film stimuli were associated with augmented electrodermal activity within both groups.
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High-frequency Broadband Modulations of Electroencephalographic Spectra.

TL;DR: It is found that unitary modes of spectral modulation of frequencies encompassing the beta, gamma, and high gamma frequency ranges can be isolated from scalp-recorded EEG data and may be differentially associated with brain sources and cognitive activities.
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The evaluative space grid : A single-item measure of positivity and negativity

TL;DR: The evaluative space grid (ESG) as discussed by the authors is a two-dimensional grid that provides a single-item measure of positivity and negativity for gamers, and it has been shown that the difference between the grid's positive and negative ratings of several types of stimuli and bipolar valence ratings were highly correlated.
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Darwin and emotion expression.

TL;DR: Darwin's three principles in this area of emotion expressions are presented and some of the research topics that developed out of his theoretical vision are discussed.
References
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