In a famous study by Larsen, Kasimatis, and Frey (1992), the researchers instructed participants with golf tees affixed to the edges of their eyebrows to make them touch. In doing so, the participants ...
Research led by UC Berkeley Ph.D. student Jefferson Ortega revealed that 30% of people take a more simplistic approach than using both facial expressions and context — depending on the ambiguity — to ...
New neuroscience research reveals that deliberately slowing breathing changes how people perceive facial emotions, with effects depending on whether they are inhaling or exhaling. The study found that ...
A new publication from Opto-Electronic Technology; DOI 10.29026/oet.2025.250010, discusses how a photonic vibration perception system achieves stable cross-individual recognition. Emotions are a ...
Facial expressions of emotion—such as the joyful smile you might display when encountering a friend or your angry frown when being cut off in traffic—are powerful social signals that are able to evoke ...