Unmasking the Face: A Guide to Recognizing Emotions from Facial Clues, Volum 10ISHK, 2003 - 212 sider Ekman and Friesen's breakthrough research on the facial expression of emotion uses scores of photographs showing emotions of surprise, fear, disgust, anger, happiness, and sadness. The authors of UNMASKING THE FACE explain how to identify these basic emotions correctly and how to tell when people try to mask, simulate, or neutralize them. It features several practical exercises that help actors, teachers, salesmen, counselors, nurses, law-enforcement personnel and physicians -- and everyone else who deals with people -- to become adept, perceptive readers of the facial expressions of emotions. |
Innhold
1 | |
10 | |
3 Research on facial expressions of emotion | 21 |
4 Surprise | 34 |
5 Fear | 47 |
6 Disgust | 66 |
7 Anger | 78 |
8 Happiness | 99 |
10 Practice faces | 129 |
11 Facial deceit | 135 |
12 Checking your own facial expression | 154 |
13 Conclusion | 167 |
The facial blueprint photographs | 169 |
Practice photos for chapter 10 | 173 |
Log and judge sheets | 188 |
193 | |
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
afraid ANGER SURPRISE DISGUST angry Atlas blanked expressor body movement Chapter contempt deception clues deintensifying DISGUST HAPPY SAD distress emotional experience emotional expression event example experienced expressions of emotion eyebrows eyes eyes/lids face uninvolved facial appearance facial expressions facial management facial muscles falsifying FEAR ANGER SURPRISE fear brow fear expression fear mouth felt forehead grin happy expression HAPPY SAD FEAR inner corners intensity judges judgments list of emotion look lower eyelid lower face lower lip mask micro-expressions modulated neutral face occur particular emotion Patricia shows Paul Ekman personal display rules photographs punctuator raised rapid facial signals sad brow/forehead SAD FEAR ANGER sclera self-concept shown in Figure Silvan Tomkins simulated six emotions slight slightly smile someone startle reaction stress film substitute expressor surprise brow SURPRISE DISGUST HAPPY surprise mouth tell tense three facial areas unwitting expressor upper eyelid upper lip usually words wrinkles