When a baby smiles at you, it's almost impossible not to smile back. This spontaneous reaction to a facial expression is part of the back-and-forth that allows us to understand each other's emotions ...
New research shows facial expressions are planned by the brain before movement, not automatic emotional reactions.
Facial emotion representations expand from sensory cortex to prefrontal regions across development, suggesting that the prefrontal cortex matures with development to enable a full understanding of ...
Researchers found that autistic and non-autistic people move their faces differently when expressing emotions like anger, happiness, and sadness. Autistic participants tended to rely on different ...
When people smile politely, flash a grin of recognition, or tighten their lips in disapproval, the movement is tiny – but the message can be huge. Imagine you are in a courtroom observing a juror who ...
The team thinks this means that the cingulate cortex manages the social purpose and context of the facial gesture, which is ...
When I started horse riding lessons at the age of eight, I was told that if a horse had its ears forward that was a good sign, and if horse had its ears back it wasn’t happy. Those riding lessons ...
When YouTube thumbnails feature certain facial expressions such as surprise or disgust, do those videos tend to get more views? To find out, researchers at Kapwing used the AI facial recognition tool ...