首页> 外文期刊>Psychological science in the public interest: a journal of the American Psychological Society >Emotional Expressions Reconsidered: Challenges to Inferring Emotion From Human Facial Movements
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Emotional Expressions Reconsidered: Challenges to Inferring Emotion From Human Facial Movements

机译:重新考虑的情感表达:从人类面部运动推断出情感的挑战

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It is commonly assumed that a person's emotional state can be readily inferred from his or her facial movements, typically called emotional expressions or facial expressions. This assumption influences legal judgments, policy decisions, national security protocols, and educational practices; guides the diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric illness, as well as the development of commercial applications; and pervades everyday social interactions as well as research in other scientific fields such as artificial intelligence, neuroscience, and computer vision. In this article, we survey examples of this widespread assumption, which we refer to as the common view, and we then examine the scientific evidence that tests this view, focusing on the six most popular emotion categories used by consumers of emotion research: anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, and surprise. The available scientific evidence suggests that people do sometimes smile when happy, frown when sad, scowl when angry, and so on, as proposed by the common view, more than what would be expected by chance. Yet how people communicate anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, and surprise varies substantially across cultures, situations, and even across people within a single situation. Furthermore, similar configurations of facial movements variably express instances of more than one emotion category. In fact, a given configuration of facial movements, such as a scowl, often communicates something other than an emotional state. Scientists agree that facial movements convey a range of information and are important for social communication, emotional or otherwise. But our review suggests an urgent need for research that examines how people actually move their faces to express emotions and other social information in the variety of contexts that make up everyday life, as well as careful study of the mechanisms by which people perceive instances of emotion in one another. We make specific research recommendations that will yield a more valid picture of how people move their faces to express emotions and how they infer emotional meaning from facial movements in situations of everyday life. This research is crucial to provide consumers of emotion research with the translational information they require.
机译:通常假设可以从他或她的面部运动中容易地推断出一个人的情绪状态,通常称为情绪表达或面部表情。这一假设会影响法律判断,政策决定,国家安全议定书和教育惯例;指导精神疾病的诊断和治疗,以及商业应用的发展;并且遍及日常社交互动以及其他科学领域的研究,如人工智能,神经科学和计算机视觉。在本文中,我们调查了这一广泛的假设的例子,我们将其称为共同观点,然后我们检查了测试这一观点的科学证据,重点关注情感研究消费者使用的六种最受欢迎​​的情感类别:愤怒,厌恶,恐惧,幸福,悲伤和惊喜。可用的科学证据表明,人们有时会在快乐时微笑,伤心,令人伤心的时候皱眉,等等,如同共同观点所提出的,超过了偶然的预期。然而,人们如何沟通愤怒,厌恶,恐惧,幸福,悲伤,惊讶在一个单一的情况下大幅度不同。此外,类似的面部运动的配置可变地表达一个以上情绪类别的实例。事实上,给定配置的面部运动(例如Scowl)经常传达以外的情绪状态。科学家们同意面部运动传达一系列信息,对社会沟通,情感或其他方式很重要。但我们的评论表明,迫切需要研究,以研究人们如何在弥补日常生活的各种环境中表达他们的脸部,以表达各种背景中的情绪和其他社会信息,以及仔细研究人们感知情绪实例的机制彼此。我们做出了具体的研究建议,它将产生更有效的照片,人们如何将他们的脸部移动到表达情绪以及他们在日常生活情况中从面部运动中推断情绪意义。这项研究对于为他们所需的翻译信息提供情感研究的消费者至关重要。

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