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Microexpression

A microexpression is a facial expression that only lasts for a short moment. It is the innate result of a voluntary and an involuntary emotional response occurring simultaneously and conflicting with one another, and occurs when the amygdala responds appropriately to the stimuli that the individual experiences and the individual wishes to conceal this specific emotion. This results in the individual very briefly displaying their true emotions followed by a false emotional reaction.[1]

Microexpressions of emotions (in order: surprise, fear/shock, sadness, anger, happiness and disgust)

Human emotions are an unconscious biopsychosocial reaction that derives from the amygdala and they typically last 0.5–4.0 seconds,[1] although a microexpression will typically last less than 1/2 of a second.[2] Unlike regular facial expressions it is either very difficult or virtually impossible to hide microexpression reactions. Microexpressions cannot be controlled as they happen in a fraction of a second, but it is possible to capture someone's expressions with a high speed camera and replay them at much slower speeds.[3] Microexpressions express the seven universal emotions: disgust, anger, fear, sadness, happiness, contempt, and surprise. Nevertheless, in the 1990s, Paul Ekman expanded his list of emotions, including a range of positive and negative emotions not all of which are encoded in facial muscles. These emotions are amusement, embarrassment, anxiety, guilt, pride, relief, contentment, pleasure, and shame.[4][5]

History edit

Microexpressions were first discovered by Haggard and Isaacs. In their 1966 study, Haggard and Isaacs outlined how they discovered these "micromomentary" expressions while "scanning motion picture films of psychotherapy for hours, searching for indications of non-verbal communication between therapist and patient"[6] Through a series of studies, Paul Ekman found a high agreement across members of diverse Western and Eastern literate cultures on selecting emotional labels that fit facial expressions. Expressions he found to be universal included those indicating anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, and surprise. Findings on contempt are less clear, though there is at least some preliminary evidence that this emotion and its expression are universally recognized.[7] Working with his long-time friend Wallace V. Friesen, Ekman demonstrated that the findings extended to preliterate Fore tribesmen in Papua New Guinea, whose members could not have learned the meaning of expressions from exposure to media depictions of emotion.[8] Ekman and Friesen then demonstrated that certain emotions were exhibited with very specific display rules, culture-specific prescriptions about who can show which emotions to whom and when. These display rules could explain how cultural differences may conceal the universal effect of expression.[9]

In the 1960s, William S. Condon pioneered the study of interactions at the fraction-of-a-second level. In his famous research project, he scrutinized a four-and-a-half-second film segment frame by frame, where each frame represented 1/25th second. After studying this film segment for a year and a half, he discerned interactional micromovements, such as the wife moving her shoulder exactly as the husband's hands came up, which combined yielded rhythms at the micro level.[10]

Years after Condon's study, American psychologist John Gottman began video-recording living relationships to study how couples interact. By studying participants' facial expressions, Gottman was able to correlate expressions with which relationships would last and which would not.[11] Gottman's 2002 paper makes no claims to accuracy in terms of binary classification, and is instead a regression analysis of a two factor model where skin conductance levels and oral history narratives encodings are the only two statistically significant variables. Facial expressions using Ekman's encoding scheme were not statistically significant.[12] In Malcolm Gladwell's book Blink, Gottman states that there are four major emotional reactions that are destructive to a marriage: defensiveness which is described as a reaction toward a stimulus as if you were being attacked, stonewalling which is the behavior where a person refuses to communicate or cooperate with another,[13] criticism which is the practice of judging the merits and faults of a person, and contempt which is a general attitude that is a mixture of the primary emotions disgust and anger.[14] Among these four, Gottman considers contempt the most important of them all.[15]

Types edit

Microexpressions are typically classified based on how an expression is modified. They exist in three groups:

  • Simulated expressions: when a microexpression is not accompanied by a genuine emotion. This is the most commonly studied form of microexpression because of its nature. It occurs when there is a brief flash of an expression, and then returns to a neutral state.[16]
  • Neutralized expressions: when a genuine expression is suppressed and the face remains neutral. This type of micro-expression is not observable due to the successful suppression of it by a person.[16]
  • Masked expressions: when a genuine expression is completely masked by a falsified expression. Masked expressions are microexpressions that are intended to be hidden, either subconsciously or consciously.[17]

In photographs and films edit

Microexpressions can be difficult to recognize, but still images and video can make them easier to perceive. In order to learn how to recognize the way that various emotions register across parts of the face, Ekman and Friesen recommend the study of what they call "facial blueprint photographs", photographic studies of "the same person showing all the emotions" under consistent photographic conditions.[18] However, because of their extremely short duration, by definition, microexpressions can happen too quickly to capture with traditional photography. Both Condon and Gottman compiled their seminal research by intensively reviewing film footage. Frame rate manipulation also allows the viewer to distinguish distinct emotions, as well as their stages and progressions, which would otherwise be too subtle to identify. This technique is demonstrated in the short film Thought Moments by Michael Simon Toon and a film in Malayalam Pretham 2016[19][20][21] Paul Ekman also has materials he has created on his website that teach people how to identify microexpressions using various photographs, including photos he took during his research period in New Guinea.[22]

Moods vs emotions edit

Moods differ from emotions in that the feelings involved last over a longer period. For example, a feeling of anger lasting for just a few minutes, or even for an hour, is called an emotion. But if the person remains angry all day, or becomes angry a dozen times during that day, or is angry for days, then it is a mood.[23] Many people describe this as a person being irritable, or that the person is in an angry mood. As Paul Ekman described, it is possible but unlikely for a person in this mood to show a complete anger facial expression. More often just a trace of that angry facial expression may be held over a considerable period: a tightened jaw or tensed lower eyelid, or lip pressed against lip, or brows drawn down and together.[24] Emotions are defined as a complex pattern of changes, including physiological arousal, feelings, cognitive processes, and behavioral reactions, made in response to a situation perceived to be personally significant.[25]

Controlled microexpressions edit

Facial expressions are not just uncontrolled instances. Some may in fact be voluntary and others involuntary, and thus some may be truthful and others false or misleading.[26] Facial expression may be controlled or uncontrolled. Some people are born able to control their expressions (such as pathological liars), while others are trained, for example actors. "Natural liars" may be aware of their ability to control microexpressions, and so may those who know them well; they may have been "getting away" with things since childhood due to greater ease in fooling their parents, teachers, and friends.[27] People can simulate emotion expressions, attempting to create the impression that they feel an emotion when they are not experiencing it at all. A person may show an expression that looks like fear when in fact they feel nothing, or perhaps some other emotion.[28] Facial expressions of emotion are controlled for various reasons, whether cultural or by social conventions. For example, in the United States many little boys learn the cultural display rule, "little men do not cry or look afraid". There are also more personal display rules, not learned by most people within a culture, but the product of the idiosyncrasies of a particular family. A child may be taught never to look angrily at his father, or never to show sadness when disappointed. These display rules, whether cultural ones shared by most people or personal, individual ones, are usually so well-learned, and learned so early, that the control of the facial expression they dictate is done automatically without thinking or awareness.[29]

Emotional intelligence edit

Involuntary facial expressions can be hard to pick up and understand explicitly, and it is more of an implicit competence of the unconscious mind. Daniel Goleman created a conclusion on the capacity of an individual to recognize their own, as well as others' emotions, and to discriminate emotions based on introspection of those feelings. This is part of Goleman's emotional intelligence. In E.I, attunement is an unconscious synchrony that guides empathy. Attunement relies heavily on nonverbal communication.[30] Looping is where facial expressions can elicit involuntary behavior. In the research motor mimicry there shows neurons that pick up on facial expressions and communicate with motor neurons responsible for muscles in the face to display the same facial expression. Thus displaying a smile may elicit a micro expression of a smile on someone who is trying to remain neutral in their expression.[31]

 
The amygdala is the emotion center of the brain

Through fMRI we can see the area where these Mirror neurons are located lights up when you show the subject an image of a face expressing an emotion using a mirror. In the relationship of the prefrontal cortex also known as the (executive mind) which is where cognitive thinking experience and the amygdala being part of the limbic system is responsible for involuntary functions, habits, and emotions. The amygdala can hijack the pre-frontal cortex in a sympathetic response. In his book Emotional Intelligence Goleman uses the case of Jason Haffizulla (who assaulted his high school physics teacher because of a grade he received on a test) as an example of an emotional hijacking in which rationality and better judgement can be impaired.[30] This is one example of how the bottom brain can interpret sensory memory and execute involuntary behavior. This is the purpose of microexpressions in attunement and how you can interpret the emotion that is shown in a fraction of a second. The microexpression of a concealed emotion that's displayed to an individual will elicit the same emotion in them to a degree, this process is referred to as an emotional contagion.[31]

MFETT and SFETT edit

Micro Facial expression training tools and subtle Facial expression training tools are software made to develop someone's skills in the competence of recognizing emotion. The software consists of a set of videos that you watch after being educated on the facial expressions. After watching a short clip, there is a test of your analysis of the video with immediate feedback. This tool is to be used daily to produce improvements. Individuals that are exposed to the test for the first time usually do poor trying to assume what expression was presented, but the idea is through the reinforcement of the feedback you unconsciously generate the correct expectations of that expression. These tools are used to develop rounder social skills and a better capacity for empathy. They are also quite useful for development of social skills in people on the autism spectrum.[31] Lie detection is an important skill not only in social situations and in the workplace, but also for law enforcement and other occupations that deal with frequent acts of deception. Microexpression and subtle expression recognition are valuable assets for these occupations as it increases the chance of detecting deception. In recent years it was found that the average person has a 54% accuracy rate in terms of exposing whether a person is lying or being truthful.[32] However, Ekman had done a research experiment and discovered that secret service agents have a 64% accuracy rate. In later years, Ekman found groups of people that are intrigued by this form of detecting deception and had accuracy rates that ranged from 68% to 73%. Their conclusion was that people with the same training on microexpression and subtle expression recognition will vary depending on their level of emotional intelligence.[32]

Lies and leakage edit

The sympathetic nervous system is one of two divisions under the autonomic nervous system, it functions involuntarily and one aspect of the system deals with emotional arousal in response to situations accordingly.[33] Therefore, if an individual decides to deceive someone, they will experience a stress response within because of the possible consequences if caught. A person using deception will typically cope by using nonverbal cues which take the form of bodily movements. These bodily movements occur because of the need to release the chemical buildup of cortisol, which is produced at a higher rate in a situation where there is something at stake.[34] The purpose for these involuntary nonverbal cues are to ease oneself in a stressful situation. In the midst of deceiving an individual, leakage can occur which is when nonverbal cues are exhibited and are contradictory to what the individual is conveying.[35] Despite this useful tactic of detecting deception, microexpressions do not show what intentions or thoughts the deceiver is trying to conceal. They only provide the fact that there was emotional arousal in the context of the situation. If an individual displays fear or surprise in the form of a microexpression, it does not mean that the individual is concealing information that is relevant to investigation. This is similar to how polygraphs fail to some degree: because there is a sympathetic response due to the fear of being disbelieved as innocent. The same goes for microexpressions, when there is a concealed emotion there is no information revealed on why that emotion was felt. They do not determine a lie, but are a form of detecting concealed information. David Matsumoto is a well-known American psychologist and explains that one must not conclude that someone is lying if a microexpression is detected but that there is more to the story than is being told.[36] Matsumoto was also the first to publish scientific evidence that microexpressions may be a key to detecting deception.[37]

Despite the prevailing belief among law enforcement and the public that micro-expressions are able to reveal whether a person is being deceitful,[38] there is a lack of empirical evidence to support this claim.[39][40] Research has shown that there is often a disconnect between displayed emotions and felt emotions; in short, deception does not necessarily produce negative emotions and negative emotions do not necessarily signal deception.[41] In addition, microexpressions do not occur often enough to be useful.[38] In one of the few studies of microexpressions, researchers found that only 2% of emotional expressions coded could be considered microexpressions and they appeared equally for truth-tellers and liars.[38][39] Other studies have found that liars and truth-tellers exhibit different responses than expected:[42][43] in a concealed information test, Pentland and colleagues found that liars showed less contempt and more intense smiles than truthful people.[43] This counters the fundamental idea behind microexpressions, which suggests that it is impossible for a liar to conceal their true nature, as evidence of their guilt "leaks" out through these expressions.[42][44] Taken together, their findings suggest that micro-expressions do not occur frequently enough to be detectable, neither are they consistent enough to distinguish liars from truth-tellers.

Universality edit

 
Universal Facial Expressions

A significant amount of research has been done in respect to whether basic facial expressions are universal or are culturally distinct. After Charles Darwin had written The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals it was widely accepted that facial expressions of emotion are universal and biologically determined.[45] Many writers have disagreed with this statement. David Matsumoto however agreed with this statement in his study of sighted and blind Olympians. Using thousands of photographs captured at the 2004 Olympic and Paralympic Games, Matsumoto compared the facial expressions of sighted and blind judo athletes, including individuals who were born blind. All competitors displayed the same expressions in response to winning and losing.[46] Matsumoto discovered that both blind and sighted competitors displayed similar facial expression, during winnings and loss. These results suggest that our ability to modify our faces to fit the social setting is not learned visually.[46] Matsumoto also has training tools he has created on his website that teaches people how to identify micro and subtle facial expressions of emotion.[47]

In popular culture edit

Microexpressions and associated science are the central premise for the 2009 television series Lie to Me, based on discoveries of Paul Ekman. The main character uses his acute awareness of microexpressions and other body language clues to determine when someone is lying or hiding something.

They also play a central role in Robert Ludlum's posthumously published The Ambler Warning, in which the central character, Harrison Ambler, is an intelligence agent able to recognize them. Similarly, one of the main characters in Alastair Reynolds' science fiction novel, Absolution Gap, Aura, can easily read microexpressions.

In The Mentalist, the main character, Patrick Jane, can often tell when people are being dishonest. However, specific reference to microexpressions is only made once in the 7th and final season.

In the 2015 science fiction thriller Ex Machina, Ava, an artificially intelligent humanoid, surprises the protagonist, Caleb, in their first meeting, when she tells him "Your microexpressions are telegraphing discomfort."

Controversy edit

Though the study of microexpressions has gained popularity through popular media, studies show it lacks internal consistency[example needed] in its conceptual formation.[48]

Maria Hartwig, professor of Psychology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, argues that it has led to wrongful imprisonment of suspects who were aggressively interrogated due to perceived micro expressions. [49]

A 2016 article in Nature explains that it is possible to mask involuntary expressions with fake expressions, and that in real world situations, over 40% of the time we can not tell the difference. [50]

Judee K. Burgoon argues in a 2018 Frontiers in Psychology opinion that micro expressions theory presumes that people feel detectible emotions always connected to the same thoughts or motivations. But what if, for example, people feel happy rather than guilty about deceiving others? [51] Burgoon also cites studies showing that micro-expressions are rare:

In one of the very few investigations of microexpression frequency, Porter and ten Brinke (2008) coded 700 high-stakes genuine and falsified emotional expressions and found only 2% were microexpressions.

and that they seldom result in arrests when implemented at places like airports:

testimony to the U.S. Congress revealed that only 0.6% out of 61,000 passenger referrals to law enforcement in 2011 and 2012 resulted in arrests (U.S. Government Accountability Office, 2013)

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Hurley, Carolyn M; Anker, Ashley E; Frank, Mark G; Matsumoto, David; Hwang, Hyisung C. (Oct 2014). "Background factors predicting accuracy and improvement in micro expression recognition". Motivation and Emotion. 38 (5): 700–714. doi:10.1007/s11031-014-9410-9. S2CID 91178436. ProQuest 1555933143.
  3. ^ Polikovsky, S.; Kameda, Y.; Ohta, Y. (2009). "Facial micro-expressions recognition using high speed camera and 3D-gradient descriptor". 3rd International Conference on Imaging for Crime Detection and Prevention (ICDP 2009). pp. P16. doi:10.1049/ic.2009.0244. ISBN 978-1-84919-207-1. Retrieved 2022-03-02.
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  37. ^ Matsumoto, David; Hwang, Hyisung C. (2018). "Microexpressions Differentiate Truths From Lies About Future Malicious Intent". Frontiers in Psychology. 9: 2545. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02545. ISSN 1664-1078. PMC 6305322. PMID 30618966.
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  44. ^ Porter, Stephen; ten Brinke, Leanne; Wallace, Brendan (March 2012). "Secrets and Lies: Involuntary Leakage in Deceptive Facial Expressions as a Function of Emotional Intensity". Journal of Nonverbal Behavior. 36 (1): 23–37. doi:10.1007/s10919-011-0120-7. ISSN 0191-5886. S2CID 28783661.
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  47. ^ "Humintell Products". Humintell. David Matsumoto. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  48. ^ Porter, Stephen; Ten Brinke, Leanne (2008). "Reading Between the Lies". Psychological Science. 19 (5): 508–514. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02116.x. PMID 18466413. S2CID 20775868.
  49. ^ Hartwig, Maria (2022-03-13). "No, you can't really tell if someone is lying from their facial expressions". Salon. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  50. ^ Iwasaki, Miho; Noguchi, Yasuki (2016-02-26). "Hiding true emotions: micro-expressions in eyes retrospectively concealed by mouth movements". Scientific Reports. 6 (1): 22049. Bibcode:2016NatSR...622049I. doi:10.1038/srep22049. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 4768101. PMID 26915796.
  51. ^ Burgoon, Judee K. (20 September 2018). "Microexpressions Are Not the Best Way to Catch a Liar". Frontiers in Psychology. 9: 1672. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01672. PMC 6158306. PMID 30294288 – via Researchgate.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Lying Is Exposed By Microexpressions We Can't Control, Science Daily, May 2006
  • Facial Expressions Test based on "The Micro Expression Training Tool"
  • "A Look Tells All" in Scientific American Mind October 2006
  • Microexpressions Complicate Face Reading, by Medical News Today 2009-03-03 at the Wayback Machine August 2007
  • Deception Detection, American Psychological Association

microexpression, microexpression, facial, expression, that, only, lasts, short, moment, innate, result, voluntary, involuntary, emotional, response, occurring, simultaneously, conflicting, with, another, occurs, when, amygdala, responds, appropriately, stimuli. A microexpression is a facial expression that only lasts for a short moment It is the innate result of a voluntary and an involuntary emotional response occurring simultaneously and conflicting with one another and occurs when the amygdala responds appropriately to the stimuli that the individual experiences and the individual wishes to conceal this specific emotion This results in the individual very briefly displaying their true emotions followed by a false emotional reaction 1 Microexpressions of emotions in order surprise fear shock sadness anger happiness and disgust Human emotions are an unconscious biopsychosocial reaction that derives from the amygdala and they typically last 0 5 4 0 seconds 1 although a microexpression will typically last less than 1 2 of a second 2 Unlike regular facial expressions it is either very difficult or virtually impossible to hide microexpression reactions Microexpressions cannot be controlled as they happen in a fraction of a second but it is possible to capture someone s expressions with a high speed camera and replay them at much slower speeds 3 Microexpressions express the seven universal emotions disgust anger fear sadness happiness contempt and surprise Nevertheless in the 1990s Paul Ekman expanded his list of emotions including a range of positive and negative emotions not all of which are encoded in facial muscles These emotions are amusement embarrassment anxiety guilt pride relief contentment pleasure and shame 4 5 Contents 1 History 2 Types 3 In photographs and films 4 Moods vs emotions 5 Controlled microexpressions 6 Emotional intelligence 7 MFETT and SFETT 8 Lies and leakage 9 Universality 10 In popular culture 11 Controversy 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksHistory editMicroexpressions were first discovered by Haggard and Isaacs In their 1966 study Haggard and Isaacs outlined how they discovered these micromomentary expressions while scanning motion picture films of psychotherapy for hours searching for indications of non verbal communication between therapist and patient 6 Through a series of studies Paul Ekman found a high agreement across members of diverse Western and Eastern literate cultures on selecting emotional labels that fit facial expressions Expressions he found to be universal included those indicating anger disgust fear happiness sadness and surprise Findings on contempt are less clear though there is at least some preliminary evidence that this emotion and its expression are universally recognized 7 Working with his long time friend Wallace V Friesen Ekman demonstrated that the findings extended to preliterate Fore tribesmen in Papua New Guinea whose members could not have learned the meaning of expressions from exposure to media depictions of emotion 8 Ekman and Friesen then demonstrated that certain emotions were exhibited with very specific display rules culture specific prescriptions about who can show which emotions to whom and when These display rules could explain how cultural differences may conceal the universal effect of expression 9 In the 1960s William S Condon pioneered the study of interactions at the fraction of a second level In his famous research project he scrutinized a four and a half second film segment frame by frame where each frame represented 1 25th second After studying this film segment for a year and a half he discerned interactional micromovements such as the wife moving her shoulder exactly as the husband s hands came up which combined yielded rhythms at the micro level 10 Years after Condon s study American psychologist John Gottman began video recording living relationships to study how couples interact By studying participants facial expressions Gottman was able to correlate expressions with which relationships would last and which would not 11 Gottman s 2002 paper makes no claims to accuracy in terms of binary classification and is instead a regression analysis of a two factor model where skin conductance levels and oral history narratives encodings are the only two statistically significant variables Facial expressions using Ekman s encoding scheme were not statistically significant 12 In Malcolm Gladwell s book Blink Gottman states that there are four major emotional reactions that are destructive to a marriage defensiveness which is described as a reaction toward a stimulus as if you were being attacked stonewalling which is the behavior where a person refuses to communicate or cooperate with another 13 criticism which is the practice of judging the merits and faults of a person and contempt which is a general attitude that is a mixture of the primary emotions disgust and anger 14 Among these four Gottman considers contempt the most important of them all 15 Types editMicroexpressions are typically classified based on how an expression is modified They exist in three groups Simulated expressions when a microexpression is not accompanied by a genuine emotion This is the most commonly studied form of microexpression because of its nature It occurs when there is a brief flash of an expression and then returns to a neutral state 16 Neutralized expressions when a genuine expression is suppressed and the face remains neutral This type of micro expression is not observable due to the successful suppression of it by a person 16 Masked expressions when a genuine expression is completely masked by a falsified expression Masked expressions are microexpressions that are intended to be hidden either subconsciously or consciously 17 In photographs and films editMicroexpressions can be difficult to recognize but still images and video can make them easier to perceive In order to learn how to recognize the way that various emotions register across parts of the face Ekman and Friesen recommend the study of what they call facial blueprint photographs photographic studies of the same person showing all the emotions under consistent photographic conditions 18 However because of their extremely short duration by definition microexpressions can happen too quickly to capture with traditional photography Both Condon and Gottman compiled their seminal research by intensively reviewing film footage Frame rate manipulation also allows the viewer to distinguish distinct emotions as well as their stages and progressions which would otherwise be too subtle to identify This technique is demonstrated in the short film Thought Moments by Michael Simon Toon and a film in Malayalam Pretham 2016 19 20 21 Paul Ekman also has materials he has created on his website that teach people how to identify microexpressions using various photographs including photos he took during his research period in New Guinea 22 Moods vs emotions editMoods differ from emotions in that the feelings involved last over a longer period For example a feeling of anger lasting for just a few minutes or even for an hour is called an emotion But if the person remains angry all day or becomes angry a dozen times during that day or is angry for days then it is a mood 23 Many people describe this as a person being irritable or that the person is in an angry mood As Paul Ekman described it is possible but unlikely for a person in this mood to show a complete anger facial expression More often just a trace of that angry facial expression may be held over a considerable period a tightened jaw or tensed lower eyelid or lip pressed against lip or brows drawn down and together 24 Emotions are defined as a complex pattern of changes including physiological arousal feelings cognitive processes and behavioral reactions made in response to a situation perceived to be personally significant 25 Controlled microexpressions editFacial expressions are not just uncontrolled instances Some may in fact be voluntary and others involuntary and thus some may be truthful and others false or misleading 26 Facial expression may be controlled or uncontrolled Some people are born able to control their expressions such as pathological liars while others are trained for example actors Natural liars may be aware of their ability to control microexpressions and so may those who know them well they may have been getting away with things since childhood due to greater ease in fooling their parents teachers and friends 27 People can simulate emotion expressions attempting to create the impression that they feel an emotion when they are not experiencing it at all A person may show an expression that looks like fear when in fact they feel nothing or perhaps some other emotion 28 Facial expressions of emotion are controlled for various reasons whether cultural or by social conventions For example in the United States many little boys learn the cultural display rule little men do not cry or look afraid There are also more personal display rules not learned by most people within a culture but the product of the idiosyncrasies of a particular family A child may be taught never to look angrily at his father or never to show sadness when disappointed These display rules whether cultural ones shared by most people or personal individual ones are usually so well learned and learned so early that the control of the facial expression they dictate is done automatically without thinking or awareness 29 Emotional intelligence editInvoluntary facial expressions can be hard to pick up and understand explicitly and it is more of an implicit competence of the unconscious mind Daniel Goleman created a conclusion on the capacity of an individual to recognize their own as well as others emotions and to discriminate emotions based on introspection of those feelings This is part of Goleman s emotional intelligence In E I attunement is an unconscious synchrony that guides empathy Attunement relies heavily on nonverbal communication 30 Looping is where facial expressions can elicit involuntary behavior In the research motor mimicry there shows neurons that pick up on facial expressions and communicate with motor neurons responsible for muscles in the face to display the same facial expression Thus displaying a smile may elicit a micro expression of a smile on someone who is trying to remain neutral in their expression 31 nbsp The amygdala is the emotion center of the brainThrough fMRI we can see the area where these Mirror neurons are located lights up when you show the subject an image of a face expressing an emotion using a mirror In the relationship of the prefrontal cortex also known as the executive mind which is where cognitive thinking experience and the amygdala being part of the limbic system is responsible for involuntary functions habits and emotions The amygdala can hijack the pre frontal cortex in a sympathetic response In his book Emotional Intelligence Goleman uses the case of Jason Haffizulla who assaulted his high school physics teacher because of a grade he received on a test as an example of an emotional hijacking in which rationality and better judgement can be impaired 30 This is one example of how the bottom brain can interpret sensory memory and execute involuntary behavior This is the purpose of microexpressions in attunement and how you can interpret the emotion that is shown in a fraction of a second The microexpression of a concealed emotion that s displayed to an individual will elicit the same emotion in them to a degree this process is referred to as an emotional contagion 31 MFETT and SFETT editMicro Facial expression training tools and subtle Facial expression training tools are software made to develop someone s skills in the competence of recognizing emotion The software consists of a set of videos that you watch after being educated on the facial expressions After watching a short clip there is a test of your analysis of the video with immediate feedback This tool is to be used daily to produce improvements Individuals that are exposed to the test for the first time usually do poor trying to assume what expression was presented but the idea is through the reinforcement of the feedback you unconsciously generate the correct expectations of that expression These tools are used to develop rounder social skills and a better capacity for empathy They are also quite useful for development of social skills in people on the autism spectrum 31 Lie detection is an important skill not only in social situations and in the workplace but also for law enforcement and other occupations that deal with frequent acts of deception Microexpression and subtle expression recognition are valuable assets for these occupations as it increases the chance of detecting deception In recent years it was found that the average person has a 54 accuracy rate in terms of exposing whether a person is lying or being truthful 32 However Ekman had done a research experiment and discovered that secret service agents have a 64 accuracy rate In later years Ekman found groups of people that are intrigued by this form of detecting deception and had accuracy rates that ranged from 68 to 73 Their conclusion was that people with the same training on microexpression and subtle expression recognition will vary depending on their level of emotional intelligence 32 Lies and leakage editThe sympathetic nervous system is one of two divisions under the autonomic nervous system it functions involuntarily and one aspect of the system deals with emotional arousal in response to situations accordingly 33 Therefore if an individual decides to deceive someone they will experience a stress response within because of the possible consequences if caught A person using deception will typically cope by using nonverbal cues which take the form of bodily movements These bodily movements occur because of the need to release the chemical buildup of cortisol which is produced at a higher rate in a situation where there is something at stake 34 The purpose for these involuntary nonverbal cues are to ease oneself in a stressful situation In the midst of deceiving an individual leakage can occur which is when nonverbal cues are exhibited and are contradictory to what the individual is conveying 35 Despite this useful tactic of detecting deception microexpressions do not show what intentions or thoughts the deceiver is trying to conceal They only provide the fact that there was emotional arousal in the context of the situation If an individual displays fear or surprise in the form of a microexpression it does not mean that the individual is concealing information that is relevant to investigation This is similar to how polygraphs fail to some degree because there is a sympathetic response due to the fear of being disbelieved as innocent The same goes for microexpressions when there is a concealed emotion there is no information revealed on why that emotion was felt They do not determine a lie but are a form of detecting concealed information David Matsumoto is a well known American psychologist and explains that one must not conclude that someone is lying if a microexpression is detected but that there is more to the story than is being told 36 Matsumoto was also the first to publish scientific evidence that microexpressions may be a key to detecting deception 37 Despite the prevailing belief among law enforcement and the public that micro expressions are able to reveal whether a person is being deceitful 38 there is a lack of empirical evidence to support this claim 39 40 Research has shown that there is often a disconnect between displayed emotions and felt emotions in short deception does not necessarily produce negative emotions and negative emotions do not necessarily signal deception 41 In addition microexpressions do not occur often enough to be useful 38 In one of the few studies of microexpressions researchers found that only 2 of emotional expressions coded could be considered microexpressions and they appeared equally for truth tellers and liars 38 39 Other studies have found that liars and truth tellers exhibit different responses than expected 42 43 in a concealed information test Pentland and colleagues found that liars showed less contempt and more intense smiles than truthful people 43 This counters the fundamental idea behind microexpressions which suggests that it is impossible for a liar to conceal their true nature as evidence of their guilt leaks out through these expressions 42 44 Taken together their findings suggest that micro expressions do not occur frequently enough to be detectable neither are they consistent enough to distinguish liars from truth tellers Universality edit nbsp Universal Facial ExpressionsA significant amount of research has been done in respect to whether basic facial expressions are universal or are culturally distinct After Charles Darwin had written The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals it was widely accepted that facial expressions of emotion are universal and biologically determined 45 Many writers have disagreed with this statement David Matsumoto however agreed with this statement in his study of sighted and blind Olympians Using thousands of photographs captured at the 2004 Olympic and Paralympic Games Matsumoto compared the facial expressions of sighted and blind judo athletes including individuals who were born blind All competitors displayed the same expressions in response to winning and losing 46 Matsumoto discovered that both blind and sighted competitors displayed similar facial expression during winnings and loss These results suggest that our ability to modify our faces to fit the social setting is not learned visually 46 Matsumoto also has training tools he has created on his website that teaches people how to identify micro and subtle facial expressions of emotion 47 In popular culture editMicroexpressions and associated science are the central premise for the 2009 television series Lie to Me based on discoveries of Paul Ekman The main character uses his acute awareness of microexpressions and other body language clues to determine when someone is lying or hiding something They also play a central role in Robert Ludlum s posthumously published The Ambler Warning in which the central character Harrison Ambler is an intelligence agent able to recognize them Similarly one of the main characters in Alastair Reynolds science fiction novel Absolution Gap Aura can easily read microexpressions In The Mentalist the main character Patrick Jane can often tell when people are being dishonest However specific reference to microexpressions is only made once in the 7th and final season In the 2015 science fiction thriller Ex Machina Ava an artificially intelligent humanoid surprises the protagonist Caleb in their first meeting when she tells him Your microexpressions are telegraphing discomfort Controversy editThough the study of microexpressions has gained popularity through popular media studies show it lacks internal consistency example needed in its conceptual formation 48 Maria Hartwig professor of Psychology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice argues that it has led to wrongful imprisonment of suspects who were aggressively interrogated due to perceived micro expressions 49 A 2016 article in Nature explains that it is possible to mask involuntary expressions with fake expressions and that in real world situations over 40 of the time we can not tell the difference 50 Judee K Burgoon argues in a 2018 Frontiers in Psychology opinion that micro expressions theory presumes that people feel detectible emotions always connected to the same thoughts or motivations But what if for example people feel happy rather than guilty about deceiving others 51 Burgoon also cites studies showing that micro expressions are rare In one of the very few investigations of microexpression frequency Porter and ten Brinke 2008 coded 700 high stakes genuine and falsified emotional expressions and found only 2 were microexpressions and that they seldom result in arrests when implemented at places like airports testimony to the U S Congress revealed that only 0 6 out of 61 000 passenger referrals to law enforcement in 2011 and 2012 resulted in arrests U S Government Accountability Office 2013 See also editInterpersonal deception theory Nonverbal communication Microaggression Facecrime Silent Talker Lie Detector Tell poker References edit a b Elena Svetieva Mark G Frank April 2016 Empathy emotion dysregulation and enhanced microexpression recognition ability Motivation and Emotion 40 2 309 320 doi 10 1007 s11031 015 9528 4 S2CID 146270791 ProQuest 1771277976 Hurley Carolyn M Anker Ashley E Frank Mark G Matsumoto David Hwang Hyisung C Oct 2014 Background factors predicting accuracy and improvement in micro expression recognition Motivation and Emotion 38 5 700 714 doi 10 1007 s11031 014 9410 9 S2CID 91178436 ProQuest 1555933143 Polikovsky S Kameda Y Ohta Y 2009 Facial micro expressions recognition using high speed camera and 3D gradient descriptor 3rd International Conference on Imaging for Crime Detection and Prevention ICDP 2009 pp P16 doi 10 1049 ic 2009 0244 ISBN 978 1 84919 207 1 Retrieved 2022 03 02 Ekman Paul 1999 Basic Emotions In T Dalgleish M Power eds Handbook of Cognition and Emotion Sussex UK John Wiley amp Sons Ltd Ekman Paul 1992 Facial Expressions of Emotion An Old Controversy and New Findings Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society London B335 1273 63 69 doi 10 1098 rstb 1992 0008 PMID 1348139 Haggard E A amp Isaacs K S 1966 Micro momentary facial expressions as indicators of ego mechanisms in psychotherapy In L A Gottschalk amp A H Auerbach Eds Methods of Research in Psychotherapy pp 154 165 New York Appleton Century Crofts Matsumoto David 1992 More evidence for the universality of a contempt expression Motivation and Emotion 16 4 363 368 doi 10 1007 bf00992972 S2CID 143333167 Ekman P Friesen W V 1971 Constants across cultures in the face and emotion PDF Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 17 2 124 129 doi 10 1037 h0030377 PMID 5542557 S2CID 14013552 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 02 28 Retrieved 2015 02 28 Ekman Paul 1989 H Wagner amp A Manstead ed Handbook of social psychophysiology Chichester England Wiley pp 143 164 Chapter The argument and evidence about universals in facial expressions of emotion Sound Film Analysis of Normal and Pathological Behavior Patterns Condon W S Ogston W D Journal of Nervous amp Mental Disease 143 4 338 347 October 1966 Research FAQs Gottman com The Gottman Institute Retrieved 2013 10 26 Gottman J Levenson R W 2002 A Two Factor Model for Predicting When a Couple Will Divorce Exploratory Analyses Using 14 Year Longitudinal Data Family Process 41 1 83 96 doi 10 1111 j 1545 5300 2002 40102000083 x PMID 11924092 Archived from the original on 2013 01 05 Webber Elizabeth Feinsilber Mike 1999 Merriam Webster s Dictionary of Allusions Merriam Webster pp 519 ISBN 9780877796282 Retrieved 10 December 2012 TenHouten W D 2007 General Theory of Emotions and Social Life Routledge Gladwell Malcolm 2005 Blink Chapter 1 Section 3 The Importance of Contempt a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 12 16 Retrieved 2013 11 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Godavarthy Sridhar July 2010 Microexpression spotting in video using optical strain MS thesis University of South Florida Retrieved 15 June 2011 Ekman P amp Friesen W V 2003 Unmasking the Face Cambridge Malor Books p 169 Prof Ragodi Trabajo Psicologia de 1er Trimestre El Bigote de Bernays Blogspot Updated 11 19 2009 Accessed 8 5 13 http elbigotedebernays blogspot com 2009 11 trabajo psicologia 1er trimestre html Braun Roman Eye Catcher Trinergy NLP Blog Posted 10 27 2009 Accessed 8 5 13 TRINERGY NLP BLOG Eye Catcher Archived from the original on 2013 12 13 Retrieved 2013 08 06 Thought Moments British Films Directory British Council Updated 12 1 2009 http film britishcouncil org thought moments Micro Expressions Training Tools Ekman P amp Friesen W V 2003 Unmasking the Face Cambridge Malor Books p 12 Ekman P amp Friesen W V 2003 Unmasking the Face Cambridge Malor Books pp 12 13 APA Dictionary of Psychology Ekman P amp Friesen W V 2003 Unmasking the Face Cambridge Malor Books p 19 Ekman P 1991 Telling Lies Clues to deceit in the Marketplace Politics and Marriage New York W W Norton amp Company Inc p 56 Ekman P amp Friesen W V 2003 Unmasking the Face Cambridge Malor Books p 20 Ekman P amp Friesen W V 2003 Unmasking the Face Cambridge Malor Books pp 20 21 a b Goleman Daniel 1995 Emotional intelligence New York Bantam Books a b c Goleman Daniel 2006 Social intelligence the new science of human relationships New York Bantam Books a b Warren Gemma Schertler Elizabeth Bull Peter March 2009 Detecting Deception from Emotional and Unemotional Cues Journal of Nonverbal Behavior 33 1 59 69 doi 10 1007 s10919 008 0057 7 S2CID 9287150 ProQuest 229223092 Boeree George The Limbic System webspace ship edu Retrieved 2018 03 25 Cortisol Hormone Health Network www hormone org Retrieved 2018 03 25 Pozzato Lydia R Fall 2010 Interpreting Nonverbal Communication for Use in Detecting Deception Forensic Examiner 19 3 86 89 92 97 126 ProQuest 859010149 Matsumoto D 2010 March 21 Dr David Matsumoto How to Tell a Lie with the Naked Eye Retrieved from Spying for Lying Spying for Lying Dr David Matsumoto How to Tell a Lie with the Naked Eye Archived from the original on 2013 05 28 Retrieved 2012 11 23 Matsumoto David Hwang Hyisung C 2018 Microexpressions Differentiate Truths From Lies About Future Malicious Intent Frontiers in Psychology 9 2545 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2018 02545 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 6305322 PMID 30618966 a b c Porter Stephen ten Brinke Leanne May 2008 Reading Between the Lies Psychological Science 19 5 508 514 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9280 2008 02116 x ISSN 0956 7976 PMID 18466413 S2CID 20775868 a b Porter Stephen Brinke Leanne February 2010 The truth about lies What works in detecting high stakes deception Legal and Criminological Psychology 15 1 57 75 doi 10 1348 135532509x433151 ISSN 1355 3259 Vrij Aldert Hartwig Maria Granhag Par Anders 2019 01 04 Reading Lies Nonverbal Communication and Deception Annual Review of Psychology 70 1 295 317 doi 10 1146 annurev psych 010418 103135 ISSN 0066 4308 PMID 30609913 S2CID 58562467 Hoque Mohammed Ehsan McDuff Daniel J Picard Rosalind W July 2012 Exploring Temporal Patterns in Classifying Frustrated and Delighted Smiles IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 3 3 323 334 doi 10 1109 T AFFC 2012 11 hdl 1721 1 79899 ISSN 1949 3045 S2CID 1966996 a b Burgoon Judee K 2018 Microexpressions Are Not the Best Way to Catch a Liar Frontiers in Psychology 9 1672 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2018 01672 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 6158306 PMID 30294288 a b Pentland S J Burgoon J K amp Twyman N W 2015 Face and Head Movement Analysis Using Automated Feature Extraction Software Proceedings of the 48th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences 2015 Koloa Hawaii Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences HICSS Porter Stephen ten Brinke Leanne Wallace Brendan March 2012 Secrets and Lies Involuntary Leakage in Deceptive Facial Expressions as a Function of Emotional Intensity Journal of Nonverbal Behavior 36 1 23 37 doi 10 1007 s10919 011 0120 7 ISSN 0191 5886 S2CID 28783661 Darwin C 1872 The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals London John Murray a b Bible E 2009 January 7 Smiles and frowns are innate not learned Retrieved from San Francisco State University http www sfsu edu news 2009 spring 1 html Humintell Products Humintell David Matsumoto Retrieved 5 March 2021 Porter Stephen Ten Brinke Leanne 2008 Reading Between the Lies Psychological Science 19 5 508 514 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9280 2008 02116 x PMID 18466413 S2CID 20775868 Hartwig Maria 2022 03 13 No you can t really tell if someone is lying from their facial expressions Salon Retrieved 2023 01 12 Iwasaki Miho Noguchi Yasuki 2016 02 26 Hiding true emotions micro expressions in eyes retrospectively concealed by mouth movements Scientific Reports 6 1 22049 Bibcode 2016NatSR 622049I doi 10 1038 srep22049 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 4768101 PMID 26915796 Burgoon Judee K 20 September 2018 Microexpressions Are Not the Best Way to Catch a Liar Frontiers in Psychology 9 1672 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2018 01672 PMC 6158306 PMID 30294288 via Researchgate Further reading editMatthew Hertenstein 2015 The Tell The Little Clues That Reveal Big Truths about Who We Are Basic Books ISBN 978 0465036592 External links editLying Is Exposed By Microexpressions We Can t Control Science Daily May 2006 The Naked Face Facial Expressions Test based on The Micro Expression Training Tool A Look Tells All in Scientific American Mind October 2006 Microexpressions Complicate Face Reading by Medical News Today Archived 2009 03 03 at the Wayback Machine August 2007 Deception Detection American Psychological Association Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Microexpression amp oldid 1206089906, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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