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 ...
Facial expressions offer potent displays of emotions and to a large extent are universally understood. Yet the social context or framing around an expression is important and can color how we ...
Autistic and non-autistic people express emotions differently through their facial movements, according to a new study, which ...
Autistic and non-autistic faces express emotion differently, and misunderstanding can go both ways. A new study suggests that ...
New research shows facial expressions are planned by the brain before movement, not automatic emotional reactions.
New research suggests that the emotional content of a facial expression influences how well observers can predict social ...
Mismatches in facial expressions may help to explain why autistic and non-autistic people sometimes struggle to recognise each other’s emotions.
A research team from the Cognitive Neurotechnology Unit and the Visual Perception and Cognition Laboratory at Toyohashi University of Technology has found that approach–avoidance behavior in a virtual ...
New research recently published in Archives of Sexual Behavior suggests children’s gender biases can be reflected in their facial emotional expressions. Psychology professor Doug VanderLaan and his ...
You prepared thoroughly for a presentation at work, and now you’re dropping wisdom to a packed room. Much as you expected, your colleagues appear wowed and ...
Learn how interrogation experts interpret facial expressions, micro-movements, and body language to understand what someone ...