
Monday, October 26, 2009
"What we have done is quantify it, automate it, prove its effectiveness and teach it very effectively."

Saturday, October 17, 2009
Emotions
IntroductionEmotion is one of the most controversial topics in psychology, a source of intense discussion and disagreement from the earliest philosophers and other thinkers to the present day. Most psychologists can probably agree on a description of emotion, e.g., what phenomena to include in a discussion of emotion. The enumeration of these parts of emotion are called the "components of emotion" here. These components are distinguished on the basis of physiological or psychological factors and include emotion faces, emotion elicitors, and emotion neural processes.
Common representation of angry emotion experience:"steamed up" with hot glowing eyes, and uncontrolled appearance. Is it the same across people?
Interpersonal aggression in the form of instrumental behaviors produced by skeletal muscles is often a concomitant of anger.
is the feeling quality of a particular emotion shared among people?
what is the nature of the differences in quality among emotions?
what underlies or produces these feelings?
what importance or function do such feelings have?
Beyond the descriptive approach to emotion, there are theories of emotion, which attempt to specify the interrelationships among components as described above and the causes, sources, and functions of emotional responses. Disagreement characterizes the intellectual climate surrounding emotion theories, but there are several works in print that summarize these approaches for the interested reader. The Theories of Emotion page of this section summarizes some of the most important theoretical statements on emotion that emphasize the role of the face.
Emotion expression is another area of controversy, but at the descriptive level, some behaviors tend to occur with other components of emotion, and seem to reveal the quality of the emotion to an observer. The Emotion Expressions page of this section discusses the relations between emotion and facial expression.
Facets

Anatomy of the Human Skull and the Nature of Physiognomy

Anatomy of the Human SkullThe human cranium and the facial bones are the foundation for the soft tissues of the face and head. Thus, much of the visible appearance of the human face depends upon the shapes and qualities of these bones. The cranium is that part of the skull that holds and protects the brain in a large cavity, called the cranial vault. Eight plate-like bones form the human cranium by fitting together at joints called sutures. The most important of these cranial bones for the appearance of the face is the frontal bone, which underlies the top of the face above the eyeballs. The human skull also includes 14 facial bones that form the lower front of the skull and provide the framework for most of the face that is important to psychological research. These 22 skull bones form other, smaller cavities besides the cranial vault, including those for the eyes, the internal ear, the nose, and the mouth. The important facial bones include the jaw bone or mandible, the maxilla or upper jaw, the zygomatic or cheek bone, and the nasal bone.
The shapes and features of the human skull determine much of the static appearances of the face and provide the basis for the features of physiognomy. Forensic pathologists and biologists can reconstruct the superficial appearance of a face merely from the human skull, as in the case of the Kennewick Man. The reconstruction of this skull revealed a facial appearance that indicates he is a descendant of a more ancient migration from Asia than that which brought the ancestors of the Indians (Amerinds), who settled widely in the Americas before the arrival of Europeans.
The term "physiognomy" refers to features of the face, especially so when, in the narrow sense, these features are used to infer the relatively enduring character or temperament of an individual. Physiognomy connotes a broader meaning, i.e., it refers to relatively unchanging facial features that might convey messages about any inner or hidden aspect of the person. Most of these facial features have as their basis the bony structure of the skull, on which the soft tissues lie. These features include the shapes and positions of major areas and landmarks of the face, such as the forehead, eyebrows, nose, cheeks, and mouth. The important facial features can be fairly accurately reconstructed by experts from the skull alone.
What might such physiognomic messages be about? Well, logically, as the signs of physiognomy change little or slowly, they can only be about characteristics that are relatively enduring and that change little or not at all. Such messages might include a person's genetic background (e.g., race, ethnicity, and family membership), genetic diseases (e.g., Down's syndrome), and more fuzzy concepts such as personality, character, and temperament. These facial features are unlikely to convey messages about characteristics that change rapidly or often, such as a transient emotions, because they cannot capture such rapid changes in their time scale of change. However, the possibility remains that repeated transient experiences, such as an often elicited emotion, might cumulate an effect on such slowly changing features. Also, observers often confuse some of these permanent signs with transient signs that actually do convey information about rapidly changing characteristics.
Visage is a project that attempts to represent the features that are used to describe the face and the characteristics that are associated with such facial features. A relational database stores the feature names, the characteristics, and the relations among them. You can get an idea of what this database contains from the Visage applet. It shows illustrations of a limited set of facial features that you can use to describe a face, then retrieves some of the descriptions that have been associated with these features.
Facial Expression
Facial Expression: A Primary Communication System1. a characteristic of a person that is represented, i.e., the signified;
2. a visual configuration that represents this characteristic, i.e., the signifier;
3. the physical basis of this appearance, or sign vehicle, e.g., the skin, muscle movements, fat, wrinkles, lines, blemishes, etc.; and
4. typically, some person or other perceiver that perceives and interprets the signs.
The study of human facial expressions has many aspects, from computer simulation and analysis to understanding its role in art, nonverbal communication, and the emotional process. Many questions about facial expressions remain unanswered and some areas are relatively unexplored. To get a broad picture of the kinds of questions that have been asked, answers to some of these questions, and the scientific research about the face that needs to be completed to answer them, see the online document Understanding the Face: Report to the National Science Foundation. Facial expressions and the ability to understand them are important for successful interpersonal relations, so improving these skills is often sought. See the Guide: How to Read Face for tips on improving your abilities.
Facial muscles produce facial expressions and emotion faces.
Tools for Studying Facial Expression Produced by Muscular Action
The Facial Action Coding System (FACS) is a method that researchers use to measure facial expressions by identifying the muscular activity underlying transient changes in facial appearance. Researchers use in facial analysis to determine the elementary behaviors that pictures of facial expressions portray. The FACS Affect Interpretation Database (FACSAID) is a tool for understanding what the muscular actions that FACS measures mean in terms of psychological concepts. FACSAID interprets the facial expressions in terms of meaningful scientific concepts.
Facial Action Coding System

Think you are good at reading people?

Ekman said people most often confuse the expressions for fear and surprise, as well as the ones for anger and disgust, because they involve some of the same muscles.
Introduction to Micro Emotions and Body Language

Micro-emotion or micro - emotions as small emotion, compare with the big emotions: Love, hate, courage, fear, joy, sadness, surprise, pleasure and disgust etc, and according David Huron’s theory which is a domain of feelings are more subtle and much less obvious. The Micro-emotion can be divided into two types, negative micro – emotion, and positive micro – emotion. The negative micro-emotion like a sort of annoyances, according Randolph Nesses descript those rare individuals who are born without pain such as appendicitis. Instead, they suffer the consequences of serious circulation problems, arising because they do not frequently change posture.
Negative micro- emotions are evident in the following everyday annoyances:
- changing posture because of discomfort
- visual glare, visual obstruction
- itch (ask deep-sea divers who wear head-gear)
- nasal congestion
- temperature, discomfort due to coolness, heat, humidity
- mild thirst & hunger
- call of nature
- watching people pass on the street
- the smell of flowers; new laundry
- viewing a distant vista
- rolling over in bed
- a sip of water
- sitting down after standing for a while
- warm water on your hands
- closing your eyes when tired
- putting on some music
The evidence proves micro-emotions have physiological concomitants, which is tachycardia versus bradycardic heart-rate responses. Tachycardia responses are indicative of mild annoyance while bradycardic responses are indicative of mild interest. These responses can occur many times per minute.