Module 42: Expressing Emotion Flashcards
How do we communicate nonverbally?
- handshakes - outgoing expressive personality
- a glance can communicate intimacy, darting eyes signal anxiety
- gazing - love
Can human detect nonverbal threats?
We readily sense subliminally presented negative words such as snake or bomb
A single angry face will pop out of a crowd
How can experience sensitize us to particular emotions?
In experiments using a series of faces that morph from anger to fear, physically abused children are much quicker than other children to spot the signals of anger
How readily can we detect deceit?
- difficult to discern deceit
- behavioral differences between liars and truth tellers are too minute for most people to detect
Duchenne Smile
Raised cheeks and activated muscles under the eyes suggest a natural smile
Does emotion give a clue to gender?
Researcher manipulated a gender-neutral face. People were more likely to see it as male when it wore an angry expression and female when it wore a smile
Note:
Male and female do no differ dramatically in self-reported emotions or physiological responses but women’s faces showed much more emotion
Does the meaning of gestures vary across cultures
yes
Do facial expressions have different meanings in different cultures?
Smiles and signs of sadness are universal
Other emotions are less universally recognized
Is interpreting facial expressions an adaptive trait?
Darwin argued that in prehistoric times, before our ancestors communicated in words, they communicated threats, greetings, and submission with facial expressions
Their shared expressions helped them survive
How does culture impact the amount of emotional expression?
- individualistic cultures display visible emotions
- collectivist cultures have less visible emotional displays
- the mouth expresses more in North America while eyes tell more in Japan
Facial Feedback Effect
The tendency of facial muscle states to trigger corresponding feelings such as fear, anger, or happiness
Health Psychology
A subfield of psychology that provides psychology’s contribution to behavioral medicine