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Facial expression

All Quotes by Facial expression

“Results from the current study suggest that behavioral avoidance to certain emotional expressions, particularly negative emotional expressions, may increase delays in identifying those same emotional expressions, which may jointly serve to increase risk for adult sexual revictimization. This interaction appears to be more influential than overall accuracy in identifying facial expressions in predicting risk for adult sexual revictimization.”
— Facial expression
“Through the principle of associated habit, the same movements of the face and eyes are practised, and can, indeed, hardly be avoided, whenever we know or believe that others are blaming, or too strongly praising, our moral conduct.”
— Facial expression
“The young and the old of widely different races, both with man and animals, express the same state of mind by the same movements.”
— Facial expression
“"We know this to be a primary autonomic response, the so called 'shame' or 'blushing' reaction to a morally shocking stimulus. It can't be controlled voluntarily, as can skin conductivity, respiration, and cardiac rate." He showed her the other instrument, a pencil-beam light. "This records fluctuations of tension within the eye muscles. Simultaneous with the blush phenomenon there generally can be found a small but detectable movement of...”
— Facial expression
“At best, it is not easy to describe facial expression. Pictures are needed, because it is a visual phenomenon.”
— Facial expression
“That is the great thing about our movement--that these members are uniform not only in ideas, but even, the facial expression is almost the same!”
— Facial expression
“There yet appeared some touch of their delicate lineaments, preserving the sweetness of proportion, and expressing itself beyond expression.”
— Facial expression
“A nervous tic, an unconscious look of anxiety, a habit of muttering to yourself—anything that carried with it the suggestion of abnormality, of having something to hide. In any case, to wear an improper expression on your face (to look incredulous when a victory was announced, for example) was itself a punishable offence. There was even a word for it in Newspeak: FACECRIME, it was called.”
— Facial expression
“Patience and sorrow stroveWere like a better way.”
— Facial expression
“Patients with schizophrenia demonstrate abnormalities in early visual encoding of facial features that precedes the ERP response typically associated with facial affect recognition. This suggests that affect recognition deficits, at least for happy and sad discrimination, are secondary to faulty structural encoding of faces. The association of abnormal face encoding with delusions may denote the physiological basis for clinical misidentification syndromes.”
— Facial expression