List Books » What the Face Reveals: Basic and Applied Studies of Spontaneous Expression Using the Facial Action Coding System (FACS)
Authors: Paul Ekman (Editor), Erika L. Rosenberg
ISBN-13: 9780195179644, ISBN-10: 0195179641
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Date Published: February 2005
Edition: 2nd Edition
Paul Ekman was a Professor of Psychology for 32 years in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of California at San Francisco. He also served as chief psychologist in the U.S. Army, Fort Dix New Jersey from 1958-1960. His interests have focused on two separate, but related topics: He originally focused on nonverbal behavior, and by the mid-60s concentrated on the expression and physiology of emotion. His other interest is interpersonal deception. His research program was supported by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Science Foundation, and the Advanced Research Projects Agency of the DOD, loosely affiliated with UCSF. His many honors have included the Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award of the American Psychological Association in 1991, and an honorary doctor of humane letters from the University of Chicago in 1994. Dr. Ekman retired from UCSF in 2004. He currently serves as the chairman of the board of the Institute of Analytic Interviewing and continues to consult on research and training related to emotion and deception. Erika Rosenberg is an emotions researcher, a health psychologist, and an expert in facial expression measurement. Dr. Rosenberg currently consults with a variety of academic and non-academic clients on issues related to facial behavior, teaches workshops in FACS and emotional communication, and is a Lecturer in the Department of Psychology at the University of California, Davis.
The editors (both affiliated with the psychology department, U of California at San Francisco)one of whom co-originated the Facial Action Coding System for the systematic analysis of facial expression utilized by much of the research contained in this textpresent 28 papers in which the face is measured as a dependent variable or as a correlate of changes in other bodily systems. The papers, dating from 1982 to 1995, are organized into two sections dealing with basic research on emotion and applied research on how facial expressions can reveal patterns of behavior that mark certain traits or psychological research. Annotation ©2005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Foreword | ||
Introduction : the study of spontaneous facial expressions in psychology | 3 | |
1 | Is the startle reaction an emotion? | 21 |
Afterword : the startle and the emotion | 36 | |
Afterword : FACS in the study of the Latah syndrome | 38 | |
2 | The asymmetry of facial actions is inconsistent with models of hemispheric specialization | 40 |
Afterword : asymmetry in facial muscular actions | 58 | |
3 | Coherence between expressive and experiential systems in emotion | 63 |
Afterword : emotions as unified responses | 86 | |
4 | Will the real relationship between facial expression and affective experience please stand up : the case of exhilaration | 89 |
Afterword : the FACS in humor research | 109 | |
5 | Extraversion, alcohol, and enjoyment | 112 |
Afterword : laughter and temperament | 131 | |
6 | Signs of appeasement : evidence for the distinct displays of embarassment, amusement, and shame | 133 |
Afterword : the forms and functions of embarrassment | 158 | |
7 | Genuine, suppressed, and faked facial behavior during exacerbation of chronic low back pain | 161 |
Afterword : on knowing another's pain | 178 | |
8 | The consistency of facial expressions of pain : a comparison across modalities | 181 |
Afterword : the consistency of facial expressions of pain | 198 | |
9 | Smiles when lying | 201 |
Afterword : smiles when lying | 215 | |
10 | Behavioral markers and recognizability of the smile of enjoyment | 217 |
Afterword : some thoughts on FACS, dynamic markers of emotion, and baseball | 239 | |
11 | Components and recognition of facial expression in the communication of emotion by actors | 243 |
Afterword : components and recognition of facial expression in the communication of emotion by actors | 268 | |
12 | Differentiating emotion elicited and deliberate emotional facial expressions | 271 |
Afterword : objective differences versus observers' ratings | 287 | |
13 | Japanese and American infants' responses to arm restraint | 289 |
Afterword : the cross-cultural study of infant facial expressions | 300 | |
14 | Differential facial responses to four basic tastes in newborns | 302 |
Afterword : facial expression as a window on sensory experience and affect in newborn infants | 320 | |
15 | All smiles are positive, but some smiles are more positive than others | 328 |
Afterword : a measure of early joy? | 350 | |
16 | Signal characteristics of spontaneous facial expressions : automatic movement in solitary and social smiles | 354 |
17 | Automated face analysis by feature point tracking has high concurrent validity with manual FACS coding | 371 |
Afterword : automated analysis of the configuration and timing of facial expression | 388 | |
18 | Toward automatic recognition of spontaneous facial actions | 393 |
Afterword : the next generation of automatic facial expression measurement | 413 | |
19 | Facial expression in affective disorders | 429 |
Afterword : depression and expression | 440 | |
20 | Emotional experience and expression in schizophrenia and depression | 441 |
Afterword : emotion, facial expression, and psychopathology | 456 | |
21 | Interaction regulations used by schizophrenic and psychosomatic patients : studies on facial behavior in dyadic interactions | 459 |
Afterword : interaction regulations used by schizophrenic and psychosomatic patients | 479 | |
22 | Nonverbal expression of psychological states in psychiatric patients | 484 |
Afterword : nonverbal expression of psychological states in psychiatric patients | 493 | |
23 | Depression and suicide faces | 496 |
Afterword : perspectives for studies of psychopathology and psychotherapy | 506 | |
24 | Protypical affective microsequences in psychotherapeutic interaction | 512 |
Afterword : from PAMS to TRAPS : investigating guilt feelings with FACS | 529 | |
25 | Facial expressions of emotion and psychopathology in adolescent boys | 532 |
Afterword : facial expression, personality, and psychopathology | 548 | |
26 | Type A behavior pattern : facial behavior and speech components | 551 |
Afterword : type A and facial behavior | 565 | |
27 | Linkages between facial expressions of anger and transient myocardial ischemia in men with coronary artery disease | |
Afterword : facial expression and emotion in the study of heart disease | 580 | |
28 | Effects of smoking opportunity on cue-elicited urge : a facial coding analysis | 583 |
Afterword : using FACS to identify contextual factors influencing craving | 603 | |
Conclusion : what we have learned by measuring facial behavior : further comments and clarifications | 605 |