Although every one of us is different in physical appearance, we all experience the same basic emotions that is hardwired in our brain. If you ask a man from a remote village in New Guinea to act as if he's angry, sad, happy, or disgust and chances are you could guess exactly what emotion is being communicated. In an article, "Reading facial expression of emotions," David Matsumoto and Hyi Sung Hwang reports the studies conducted by Paul Ekman and Carroll Lzard called "universality studies." The study was a revitalization of Charles Darwin's theory of facial expression of emotions. After cross referencing over 168 datasets from 75 different laboratories using different methodologies. The two found that study on facial expression of emotions all over the world yield to same results. They went on to include that micro expression that typically that usually occurs in a split second are likely to conceal genuine
Although every one of us is different in physical appearance, we all experience the same basic emotions that is hardwired in our brain. If you ask a man from a remote village in New Guinea to act as if he's angry, sad, happy, or disgust and chances are you could guess exactly what emotion is being communicated. In an article, "Reading facial expression of emotions," David Matsumoto and Hyi Sung Hwang reports the studies conducted by Paul Ekman and Carroll Lzard called "universality studies." The study was a revitalization of Charles Darwin's theory of facial expression of emotions. After cross referencing over 168 datasets from 75 different laboratories using different methodologies. The two found that study on facial expression of emotions all over the world yield to same results. They went on to include that micro expression that typically that usually occurs in a split second are likely to conceal genuine