What the Face Reveals: Basic and Applied Studies of Spontaneous Expression Using the Facial Action Coding System (FACS)

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Paul Ekman, Erika L. Rosenberg
Oxford University Press, 1997 - 495 páginas
Facial expressions convey a vast amount of information, but only recently have investigators begun to explore the precise details of what expressions are telling us about internal states, social behavior, and psychopathology. The Facial Action Coding System (FACS), which is a tool for comprehensively measuring facial expressions, plays a central role in this rapidly growing and exciting field.
This volume represents the state of the art in research on facial expressions. Drawing from psychology, medicine, and psychiatry, the chapters address such key issues as the dynamic and morphological differences between voluntary and involuntary expressions; the relationship between what people show on their faces and what they say they feel; and whether it is possible to use facial behavior to distinguish among different psychiatric populations. The volume includes groundbreaking work on how the face reveals emotions, deception, psychopathology, and aspects of physical health. An essential reference for anyone pursuing research in facial expressions, this work combines classic papers with up-to-date commentary by the authors.
 

Contenido

The Study of Spontaneous Facial Expressions
3
Is the Startle Reaction an Emotion?
21
The Startle Reaction and Emotion
36
Coherence Between Expressive and Experiential Systems
63
Will the Real Relationship Between Facial Expression and Affective
89
Extraversion Alcohol and Enjoyment
112
Evidence for the Distinct Displays
133
Genuine Suppressed and Faked Facial Behavior during Exacerbation
161
Differential Facial Responses to Four Basic Tests in Newborns
302
Facial Expression as a Window on Sensory Experience
320
Facial Expression in Affective Disorders
331
Emotional Experience and Expression in Schizophrenia
343
Psychopathology
358
Interaction Regulations Used by Schizophrenic
381
Psychiatric Patients
395
MICHAEL HELLER VÉRONIQUE HAYNAL
408

A Comparison
181
Smiles When Lying
201
Behavioral Markers and Recognizability of the Smile
217
Emotion and Baseball
239
Components and Recognition of Facial Expression
268
Japanese and American Infants Responses to Arm Restraint
289
Expressions
300
Protypical Affective Microsequences in Psychotherapeutic
414
From PAMS to TRAPS Investigating Guilt Feelings
431
Psychopathology
450
What We Have Learned by Measuring Facial Behavior
469
Index
487
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