• Order to parcel locker

    Order to parcel locker
  • easy pay

    easy pay
  • Reduced price
The Science of Facial Expression

The Science of Facial Expression

9780190613501
1,017.90 zł
916.11 zł Save 101.79 zł Tax included
Lowest price within 30 days before promotion: 916.11 zł
Quantity
Available in 4-6 weeks

  Delivery policy

Choose Paczkomat Inpost, Orlen Paczka, DPD or Poczta Polska. Click for more details

  Security policy

Pay with a quick bank transfer, payment card or cash on delivery. Click for more details

  Return policy

If you are a consumer, you can return the goods within 14 days. Click for more details

Description
The importance of facial expressions has led to a steadily growing body of empirical findings and theoretical analyses. Every decade has seen work that extends or challenges previous thinking on facial expression. The Science of Facial Expression provides an updated review of the current psychology of facial expression . This book summarizes current conclusions and conceptual frameworks from leading figures who have shaped the field in their various subfields, and will therefore beof interest to practitioners, students, and researchers of emotion in cognitive psychology, neuroscience, biology, anthropology, linguistics, affective computing, and homeland security.Organized in eleven thematic sections, The Science of Facial Expression offers a broad perspective of the geography of the science of facial expression. It reviews the scientific history of emotion perception and the evolutionary origins and functions of facial expression. It includes an updated compilation on the great debate around Basic Emotion Theory versus Behavioral Ecology and Psychological constructionism. The developmental psychology and social psychology of facial expressions isexplored in the role of facial expressions in child development, social interactions, and culture. The book also covers appraisal theory, concepts, neural and behavioral processes, and lesser-known facial behaviors such as yawing, vocal crying, and vomiting. In addition, the book reflects that researchon the expression of emotion is moving towards a significance of context in the production and interpretation of facial expression The authors expose various fundamental questions and controversies yet to be resolved, but in doing so, open many sources of inspiration to pursue in the scientific study of facial expression.
Product Details
OUP USA
84707
9780190613501
9780190613501

Data sheet

Publication date
2017
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
552
Dimensions (mm)
156 x 235
Weight (g)
930
  • Contributors; Part I: Introduction; Chapter 1: Introduction; Jose-Miguel Fernandez-Dols and James A. Russell; Chapter2: Facing the Past: A history of the face in psychological research on emotion perception; Maria Gendron and Lisa Feldman-Barrett; Part II: The Great Debate: The Facial Expression Program; Chapter 3: Facial Expressions; Paul Ekman; Chapter 4: Understanding Multimodal Emotional Expressions: Recent Advances in Basic Emotion Theory; Dacher Keltner and Daniel T. Cordaro; Chapter 5: The Behavioral Ecology View of Facial Displays, 25 Years Later; Alan J. Fridlund; Chapter 6: Toward a Broader Perspective on Facial Expressions: Moving on from Basic Emotion Theory; James A. Russell; Chapter 7: Coherence between Emotions and Facial Expressions: A Research Synthesis; Juan I. Duran, Rainer Reisenzein, and Jose-Miguel Fernandez-Dols; Part III: Evolution; Chapter 8: Evolution of facial musculature; Rui Diogo and Sharlene E. Santana; Chapter 9: The faces monkeys make; Eliza Bliss-Moreau and Gilda Moadab; Chapter 10: Form and function in facial expressive behavior; Daniel H. Lee and Adam K. Anderson; Part IV: Unexplored Signals; Chapter 11: Beyond the Smile: Non-Traditional Facial, Emotional, and Social Behaviors; Robert R. Provine; Chapter 12: The communicative and social functions of human crying; Asmir Gracanin, Lauren M. Bylsma, and Ad J. J. M. Vingerhoets; Part V: Neural Processes; Chapter 13: Neural and Behavioral Responses to Ambiguous Facial Expressions of Emotion; Paul J. Whalen, Maital Neta, M. Justin Kim, Alison M. Mattek, F.C. Davis, James M. Taylor and Samantha Chavez; Chapter 14: Using Facial Expressions to Probe Brain Circuitry Associated with Anxiety and Depression; Johnna R. Swartz, Lisa M. Shin, Brenda Lee, and Ahmad R. Hariri; Part VI: Individual Development; Chapter 15: Spontaneously produced facial expressions in infants and children; Linda A. Camras, Vanessa L. Castro, Amy G. Halberstadt, and Michael M. Shuster; Chapter 16: The Development of Emotion Recognition: The Broad-to-differentiated Hypothesis; Sherri C. Widen; Part VII: Social Perception; Chapter 17: A Social Vision Account of Facial Expression Perception; Reginald B. Adams, Jr., Daniel N. Albohn, and Kestutis Kveraga; Chapter 18: Inherently Ambiguous: An argument for contextualized emotion perception; Hillel Aviezer and Ran Hassin; Part VIII: Appraisal; Chapter 19: Facial expression is driven by appraisal and generates appraisal inference; Klaus Scherer, Marcello Mortillaro, and Marc Mehu; Chapter 20: The social signal value of emotions: The role of contextual factors in social inferences drawn from emotion displays; Ursula Hess and Shlomo Hareli; Part IX: Concepts; Chapter 21: Embodied Simulation in Decoding Facial Expression; Paula M. Niedenthal, Adrienne Wood, Magdalena Rychlowska, and Sebastian Korb; Chapter 22: Language and emotion: Hypotheses on the constructed nature of emotion perception; Cameron M. Doyle and Kristen A. Lindquist; Chapter X: Social Interaction; Chapter 23: Interpersonal Effects and Functions of Facial Activity; Brian Parkinson; Chapter 24: Natural Facial Expression: A View from Psychological Constructionism and Pragmatics; Jose-Miguel Fernandez-Dols; Part XI: Culture; Chapter 25: Emotional dialects in the language of emotion; Hillary Anger Elfenbein; Chapter 26: Facial Expressions and Emotions in Indigenous Societies; Carlos Crivelli and Maria Gendron; Index;
Comments (0)