نتایج جستجو برای: happy facial phenotype

تعداد نتایج: 227140  

Journal: :iranian journal of child neurology 0
mohammad reza salehi omran associate professor of pediatric neurology, non-communicable pediatric research center, babol university of medical sciences,babol, iran mohammad kazem bakhshandeh bali pediatrics resident, babol university of medical sciences, babol, iran

objective angelman syndrome (as) is a genetically determined syndrome that has a unique behavioral phenotype. this syndrome is described as jerky ataxia and an unusual happy facial expression with pathological laughter. severe mental retardation is a unique feature of the syndrome, together with microbrachycephaly and abnormal electroencephalographic findings with or without clinical seizures. ...

2017
Ádám György Szabó Kinga Farkas Csilla Marosi Lajos R. Kozák Gábor Rudas János Réthelyi Gábor Csukly

BACKGROUND Schizophrenia has a negative effect on the activity of the temporal and prefrontal cortices in the processing of emotional facial expressions. However no previous research focused on the evaluation of mixed emotions in schizophrenia, albeit they are frequently expressed in everyday situations and negative emotions are frequently expressed by mixed facial expressions. METHODS Altoge...

2015
Peter Kay Chai Tay

Facial expressions are valuable for conveying and understanding the inner thoughts and feelings of the expressor. However, the adaptive value associated with a specific expression on a male face is different from a female face. The present review uses a functional-evolutionary analysis to elucidate the evolutionary advantage in the expression and perception of angry-male and happy-female faces ...

Journal: :Psychological science 2000
U Dimberg M Thunberg K Elmehed

Studies reveal that when people are exposed to emotional facial expressions, they spontaneously react with distinct facial electromyographic (EMG) reactions in emotion-relevant facial muscles. These reactions reflect, in part, a tendency to mimic the facial stimuli. We investigated whether corresponding facial reactions can be elicited when people are unconsciously exposed to happy and angry fa...

Journal: :Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society : JINS 2010
Mario F Juruena Vincent P Giampietro Stephen D Smith Simon A Surguladze Jeffrey A Dalton Philip J Benson Anthony J Cleare Cynthia H Y Fu

The amygdala has a key role in automatic non-conscious processing of emotions. Highly salient emotional stimuli elicit amygdala activity, and happy faces are among the most rapidly perceived facial expressions. In backward masking paradigms, an image is presented briefly and then masked by another stimulus. However, reports of amygdala responses to masked happy faces have been mixed. In the pre...

2013
Anna Pohl Silke Anders Martin Schulte-Rüther Klaus Mathiak Tilo Kircher

Imitation of facial expressions engages the putative human mirror neuron system as well as the insula and the amygdala as part of the limbic system. The specific function of the latter two regions during emotional actions is still under debate. The current study investigated brain responses during imitation of positive in comparison to non-emotional facial expressions. Differences in brain acti...

2017
Yoshiyuki Ueda Kie Nagoya Sakiko Yoshikawa Michio Nomura

Forming specific facial expressions influences emotions and perception. Bearing this in mind, studies should be reconsidered in which observers expressing neutral emotions inferred personal traits from the facial expressions of others. In the present study, participants were asked to make happy, neutral, and disgusted facial expressions: for "happy," they held a wooden chopstick in their molars...

2003
TONY T. YANG

Objective: To study the possible role of the amygdala in the recognition of happy and sad facial expressions in adolescents aged 13 to 17 years. Method: Twelve healthy adolescents (6 females and 6 males) underwent noninvasive 3-Tesla functional magnetic resonance imaging while viewing pictures of happy, sad, and neutral facial expressions. Results: Happy faces produced signiÞcant bilateral amyg...

2015
Janek S. Lobmaier Martin H. Fischer Derek G.V. Mitchell

Motivated by conflicting evidence in the literature, we re-assessed the role of facial feedback when detecting quantitative or qualitative changes in others' emotional expressions. Fifty-three healthy adults observed self-paced morph sequences where the emotional facial expression either changed quantitatively (i.e., sad-to-neutral, neutral-to-sad, happy-to-neutral, neutral-to-happy) or qualita...

2002
Tatia M.C. Lee Ho-Ling Liu Rumjahn Hoosain Wan-Ting Liao Chien-Te Wu Kenneth S.L. Yuen Chetwyn C.H. Chan Peter T. Fox Jia-Hong Gao

To examine the effect of gender on the volume and pattern of brain activation during the viewing of alternating sets of faces depicting happy or sad expressions, 24 volunteers, 12 men and 12 women, participated in this functional magnetic resonance imaging study. The experimental stimuli were 12 photographs of Japanese adults selected from Matsumoto and Ekman’s Pictures of Facial Affect. Four o...

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