Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Decoded: What makes an angry face

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Aug, 2014 10:32 AM
  • Decoded: What makes an angry face
Do you know what is the most common facial feature when you get angry at someone? It is lowered eyebrow.
 
Also include thinned lips and flared nostrils as researchers have identified the origin and purpose of the facial expression for anger that is universal.
 
“The expression is cross-culturally universal and even congenitally blind children make this same face without ever having seen one,” said lead author Aaron Sell from school of criminology at Griffith University in Australia.
 
The “anger expression” employs seven distinct muscle groups that contract in a highly stereotyped manner.
 
The researchers sought to understand why evolution chose those particular muscle contractions to signal the emotional state of anger.
 
Using computer-generated faces, they demonstrated that each of the individual components of the anger face made those computer-generated people appear physically stronger.
 
“We hypothesised that the anger face evolved its specific form because it delivers something more for the expresser. Each element is designed to help intimidate others by making the angry individual appear more capable of delivering harm if not appeased,” Sell explained.
 
“The function of the anger face is intimidation, just like a frog will puff itself up or a baboon will display its canines,” added Leda Cosmides, a professor of psychology at University of California Santa Barbara.
 
These threat displays - like those of other animals - consist of exaggerations of cues of fighting ability, Sell continued.
 
“So a man will puff up his chest, stand tall and morph his face to make himself appear stronger,” he noted.
 
The findings appeared online in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior.

MORE Life ARTICLES

Music training makes kids better learners

Music training makes kids better learners
Providing your kids with the opportunity to learn a musical instrument or to sing strengthens their reading and language skills, says a study....

Music training makes kids better learners

Diversity at workplace seen differently

Diversity at workplace seen differently
People's views about diversity of an organisation or team depends on whether or not members of their own race are included, says a study....

Diversity at workplace seen differently

Are you a neurotic? Check your Facebook photo use

Are you a neurotic? Check your Facebook photo use
If you have the habit of uploading more photos on Facebook to feel noticed and earn more "likes", it is more likely that you may be a "neurotic" than an extrovert....

Are you a neurotic? Check your Facebook photo use

Teenage girls 'dumb down' for boys: Study

Teenage girls 'dumb down' for boys: Study
According to an interesting study, young teenage girls often feel the need to play down how intelligent they are so that they do not intimidate their male peers....

Teenage girls 'dumb down' for boys: Study

'Educate kids to protect them from revenge porn, cyber attacks'

'Educate kids to protect them from revenge porn, cyber attacks'
Information security experts Friday called for teaching children to keep themselves safe while using social networks to tackle incidents of cyber bullying...

'Educate kids to protect them from revenge porn, cyber attacks'

Resilience key to tackling sexual advances

Resilience key to tackling sexual advances
How do you react when faced with unwanted calls, demeaning looks or sexual advances from men? Do you feel vulnerable or resilient?

Resilience key to tackling sexual advances