Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 33 of
33
with 100 triples per page.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions abstract "Facial expressions are produced to express a reaction to a situation or event or to evoke a response from another individual or individuals. They are signals of emotion and social intent. People make faces in response to "direct audience effects" when they are watching sports, discussing politics, eating or smelling, in pain, and see or hear something humorous. While one may have the same emotional reaction to a particular situation, he or she is more likely to express this emotion via a facial expression if they are in a social situation. Smiles, in particular, are "evolved signaling displays [that] are the result of selective pressures for conspicuous, stereotyped, and redundant communication". Smiling is a visual signal that requires eye contact from the recipient to the one smiling and is intended to communicate a feeling of happiness and joy. In an experiment by Alan Fridlund, smiling occurred least when one was watching a video alone, then more often when a person was alone watching the video but believed a friend was performing another task, even more often when that person believed a friend was simultaneously watching the video somewhere else, and most often when one was watching a movie with a friend physically present. This evidence shows that even if someone has the same internal reaction to a stimulus (like a movie), they are more likely to externalize these feelings when surrounded by peers or under the assumption that peers are engaged in the same activity.The production of facial expressions, however, is not solely limited to interpersonal situations. Since humans are inherently social beings, they often imagine themselves in social situations even when they are alone. This phenomenon occurs in a variety of different contexts: treating oneself as a social interactant (talking to oneself), imagining others are present (either who are currently existent or have died), envisioning future social interactions, and personifying animals or inanimate objects (talking to pets). Solitary facial expressions are generated for an imagined other. According to role and impression- management theories, a perceived audience, whether real or imaginary, causes one to assume a role that is consistent with their audience. For example, a young girl may smile to herself in the mirror while imagining herself talking to a boy from class, but may grimace while imagining herself responding to her mother's scolding. Thus, "solitary faces occur for the same reasons as public ones, if only because when we are alone we create social interactions in our imaginations. They suggest the possibility that sociality may play a major role in the mediation of solitary faces". There are developmental differences in solitary facial expression, beginning with instinctive expressions in infancy and developing into more complex ones as a child's concept of sociality and emotion matures.".
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageID "41068159".
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageLength "16206".
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageOutDegree "13".
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageRevisionID "679149743".
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Adolescence.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Category:Child_development.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Category:Developmental_neuroscience.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Category:Developmental_psychology.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Category:Facial_expressions.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Early_childhood.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Facial_expression.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Infant.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Preadolescence.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Smile.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink Toddler.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLink File:Playful_mood_of_children_at_Nepal.jpg.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageWikiLinkText "Developmental differences in solitary facial expressions".
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions hasPhotoCollection Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Orphan.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Term_paper.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions subject Category:Child_development.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions subject Category:Developmental_neuroscience.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions subject Category:Developmental_psychology.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions subject Category:Facial_expressions.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions comment "Facial expressions are produced to express a reaction to a situation or event or to evoke a response from another individual or individuals. They are signals of emotion and social intent. People make faces in response to "direct audience effects" when they are watching sports, discussing politics, eating or smelling, in pain, and see or hear something humorous.".
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions label "Developmental differences in solitary facial expressions".
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions sameAs m.0z89r88.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions sameAs Q17119054.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions sameAs Q17119054.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions wasDerivedFrom Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions?oldid=679149743.
- Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions isPrimaryTopicOf Developmental_differences_in_solitary_facial_expressions.