Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Facial paralysis increases risk of prejudice

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Sep, 2014 11:43 AM
  • Facial paralysis increases risk of prejudice
People may hold a prejudice against those with facial paralysis simply because they cannot communicate in the universal language of facial expression, says a study.
 
People with facial paralysis experience stigma, showed the findings of the study that the important role the face plays in everyday communication.
 
"People are more wary and more likely to form a negative impression of someone with a disability," said Kathleen Bogart, an assistant professor of psychology at the Oregon State University.
 
"Identifying that stigma is the first step to addressing it," Bogart added.
 
Some basic facial expressions, including the smile, are communicated universally across cultures.
 
But people with facial paralysis or other facial movement disorders may not be able to participate in that communication because they lack emotional expression and may seem unresponsive in social situations.
 
For the study, about 120 participants, none of whom had facial paralysis, watched or listened to videos of people with varying degrees of facial paralysis and were asked to rate the subject's emotions as the person recounted happy or sad experiences.
 
Those with severe facial paralysis were rated as less happy than those with milder facial paralysis across different communication types.
 
Those with severe facial paralysis were also rated as less sad than those with milder facial paralysis.
 
The study also found that people often rely on a combination of communication channels to perceive emotions.
 
"That is important because people with facial paralysis can adapt other communication channels, such as tone of voice or gestures, to enhance their communication ability," Bogart said.
 
The study appeared in the journal Basic and Applied Social Psychology.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Listen to ticking clock, make babies

Listen to ticking clock, make babies
It may sound peculiar but listening to your clock ticking may increase your urge to marry and start a family before childbearing years are over....

Listen to ticking clock, make babies

Bad sleep may increase suicide risk in older adults

Bad sleep may increase suicide risk in older adults
Older adults who complain of poor sleep quality, independent of a depressed mood, are at increased risk for suicide, says a study....

Bad sleep may increase suicide risk in older adults

Allergic to cashews? A process to make it safer

Allergic to cashews? A process to make it safer
Scientists are now developing a method to process cashews -- and potentially other nuts -- that could make them safer to eat for people who are allergic to them...

Allergic to cashews? A process to make it safer

Test to reveal if your coffee is fake

Test to reveal if your coffee is fake
Is your cup of hot coffee brimming with ingredients like starch syrup that are neither sweet nor flavourful? Worry not as a test to detect counterfeit coffee is here...

Test to reveal if your coffee is fake

Anti-depressants may kill your love life

Anti-depressants may kill your love life
"Drugs called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), which work mainly through the serotonin system, were found to be affecting men's feelings ...

Anti-depressants may kill your love life

Job stress ups diabetes risk

Job stress ups diabetes risk
Individuals who are under a high level of pressure at work and at the same time perceive little control over the activities they perform face an about...

Job stress ups diabetes risk