On prototypical facial expressions vs variation in facial behavior: what have we learned on the “visibility” of emotions from measuring facial actions in humans and apes

Augusta Gaspar, Francisco Esteves, Patrícia Arriaga

Resultado de pesquisarevisão de pares

Resumo

It has long been recognized that behavior evolves as do other traits and that it may have great impact on evolution. It tends to be conservative when survival and fast responding are at stake, and because of that, similar patterns can be found across populations or species, typical in their form and intensity, and often also typical in context and consequence. Such fixed stereotypic patterns that evolved to communicate are known as displays, and their phylogenies can virtually be traced. In this chapter, we contrast and discuss two coexisting trends in the study of the meaning and origins of human facial expression: one, with a tradition of exploring cross-cultural commonalities in the recognition of facial expression, that may indicate species-specific displays of emotion (prototypical facial expressions) and another that builds upon the growing evidence that such expressive prototypes are outnumbered by a diversity of facial compositions that, even in emotional situations, vary in relation to culture, context, group, maturation, and individual factors. We present behavioral studies that look at links between basic emotion and facial actions in both human and non-human primates and discuss the role of multiple factors in facial action production and interpretation.
Idioma originalEnglish
Título da publicação do anfitriãoThe evolution of social communication in primates
Subtítulo da publicação do anfitriãoa multidisciplinary approach
EditoresMarco Pina, Nathalie Gontier
Local da publicaçãoCham
EditoraSpringer
Páginas101-126
Volume1
ISBN (eletrónico)9783319026695
ISBN (impresso)9783319026688, 9783319345963
DOIs
Estado da publicaçãoPublicado - 24 mai. 2014
Publicado externamenteSim
EventoInternational Conference on From Grooming to Speaking - Recent Trends in Social Primatology and Human Ethology - Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa
Duração: 10 set. 201212 set. 2012

Série de publicação

NomeInterdisciplinary Evolution Research
EditoraSpringer
Número1
ISSN (impresso)2199-3068
ISSN (eletrónico)2199-3076

Conferência

ConferênciaInternational Conference on From Grooming to Speaking - Recent Trends in Social Primatology and Human Ethology
País/TerritórioPortugal
CidadeLisboa
Período10/09/1212/09/12

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