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Showing papers on "Facial expression published in 1969"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The study explores the interaction situation, and considers how within deception interactions differences in neuroanatomy and cultural influences combine to produce specific types of body movements and facial expressions which escape efforts to deceive and emerge as leakage or deception clues.
Abstract: : Research relevant to psychotherapy regarding facial expression and body movement, has shown that the kind of information which can be gleaned from the patients words - information about affects, attitudes, interpersonal styles, psychodynamics - can also be derived from his concomitant nonverbal behavior. The study explores the interaction situation, and considers how within deception interactions differences in neuroanatomy and cultural influences combine to produce specific types of body movements and facial expressions which escape efforts to deceive and emerge as leakage or deception clues.

1,594 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
04 Apr 1969-Science
TL;DR: Observers in both literate and preliterate cultures chose the predicted emotion for photographs of the face, although agreement was higher in the literate samples, suggesting that the pan-cultural element in facial displays of emotion is the association between facial muscular movements and discrete primary emotions.
Abstract: Observers in both literate and preliterate cultures chose the predicted emotion for photographs of the face, although agreement was higher in the literate samples. These findings suggest that the pan-cultural element in facial displays of emotion is the association between facial muscular movements and discrete primary emotions, although cultures may still differ in what evokes an emotion, in rules for controlling the display of emotion, and in behavioral consequences.

1,465 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 1969

238 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: 2 experiments were performed to test the hypothesis that there are separate and distinguishable facial expressions for feat, sadness and pain and the Js showed a significant preference for either fear, sadness or pain in the labeling of 36 of the 39 total photos.
Abstract: 2 experiments were performed to test the hypothesis that there are separate and distinguishable facial expressions for feat, sadness and pain. 14 photos were rated by 22 Js in the first experiment ...

29 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a method was presented for obtaining a series of silhouettes that were analyzed as profiles of the human face, and when depressed psychiatric patients smiled before and after electroshock therapy, a greater facial displacement was recorded after treatment.
Abstract: A method is presented for obtaining a seriesofsilhouettes that were analyzed as profiles of the human face. When depressed psychiatric patients smiled before and after electroshock therapy, a greater facial displacement was recorded after treatment. Controls did not show any trend in this regard.

7 citations