New research shows facial expressions are planned by the brain before movement, not automatic emotional reactions.
We use our faces to communicate, but our facial expressions may not always come across the way we think they do. And we may be just as wrong when reading the faces of others, a study says. "Many ...
Autistic and non-autistic faces express emotion differently, and misunderstanding can go both ways. A new study suggests that ...
TikTok has quietly become one of the most influential platforms in the contemporary information environment, not because it ...
The AI field has made remarkable progress with incomplete data. Leading generative models like Claude, Gemini, GPT-4, and Llama can understand text but not emotion. These models can’t process your ...
When someone who usually texts with emojis suddenly goes cold—no faces, no punctuation softeners—the absence becomes its own ...
Autistic and non-autistic people express emotions differently through their facial movements, according to a new study, which ...
Lay presentations of research on emotions often make two claims. First, they assert that all humans develop the same set of core emotions. This claim is called the “basic emotion approach” (Ekman, ...