| Literature DB >> 30110397 |
Federica Cavicchio1, Svetlana Dachkovsky1, Livnat Leemor2, Simone Shamay-Tsoory2, Wendy Sandler1.
Abstract
Emotions are signaled by complex arrays of face and body actions. The main point of contention in contemporary treatments is whether these arrays are discrete, holistic constellations reflecting emotion categories, or whether they are compositional-comprised of smaller components, each of which contributes some aspect of emotion to the complex whole. We address this question by investigating spontaneous face and body displays of athletes and place it in the wider context of human communicative signals and, in particular, of language. A defining property of human language is compositionality-the ability to combine and recombine a relatively small number of elements to create a vast number of complex meaningful expressions, and to interpret them. We ask whether this property of language can be discerned in a more ancient communicative system: intense emotional displays. In an experiment, participants interpreted a range of emotions and their strengths in pictures of athletes who had just won or lost a competition. By matching participants' judgements with minutely coded features of face and body, we find evidence for compositionality. The distribution of participants' responses indicates that most of the athletes' face and body features contribute to displays of dominance or submission. More particular emotional components related, for example, to positive valence (e.g. happy) or goal obstruction (e.g. frustrated), were also found to significantly correlate with certain face and body features. We propose that the combination of features linked to broader components (i.e, dominant or submissive) and to more particular emotions (e.g, happy or frustrated) reflects more complex emotional states. In sum, we find that the corporeal expression of intense, unfiltered emotion has compositional properties, potentially providing an ancient scaffolding upon which, millions of years later, the abstract and constrained compositional system of human language could build.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30110397 PMCID: PMC6093664 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0201970
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1(a) Prototypical victory display; (b) prototypical defeat display. Pictures are licensed under CC by 4.0. Credits go respectively to M. Smelter and A. Gockowski.
Fig 2Example of the experimental procedure, with sample picture of an athlete, and a scale for response, in this case, between very Happy and very Sad.
The athlete’s image is licensed under CC by 4.0. Credits to Senior Airman Rusty Frank.
Fig 3(a) Dominant: standing, hands clenched, head up, contracted upper and central face, mouth wide open and slightly funneled. (b) Dominant/Happy: Dominant features plus lip corners up and shoulders back. (c) Dominant/Angry: Dominant features plus lip corners down and asymmetrical body posture. Pictures are licensed under cc by 4.0. Credits go respectively to Carine06, Eva Rinaldi and Alon Luf.
a) Body and Face features characterizing the tested emotions, b) post-hoc clusters of emotions.
| a) | |||||||||
| Lip Corners Up (12) | |||||||||
| Lip Corners Down (15) | |||||||||
| Lower Lip Depressor | |||||||||
| Stretched Mouth (20) | |||||||||
| Lip Part (25) | |||||||||
| Relaxed Mouth (26) | |||||||||
| Neutral Upper Face/ Closed Eyes (43) | |||||||||
| Not Visible | |||||||||
| Inner Brow Raise (1) | |||||||||
| Funneler (22) | |||||||||
| Chin Raiser (17) | |||||||||
| Open Mouth (27) | |||||||||
| Contracted Nose (9/10+38) | |||||||||
| Contracted Upper Face (4+6/4+6+7) | |||||||||
| On Knees | |||||||||
| Hands on Face | |||||||||
| Head Down (54) | |||||||||
| Relaxed Hands | |||||||||
| Head Up (53) | |||||||||
| Standing | |||||||||
| Clenched Hands | |||||||||
| Shoulders/Torso forward | |||||||||
| Asymmetry | |||||||||
| Shoulders Back | |||||||||
| b) | |||||||||