Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Contributors
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Three broad theoretical frameworks
- Part III With a biological and developmental focus
- 6 Animal sounds and human faces: Do they have anything in common?
- 7 Yawns, laughs, smiles, tickles, and talking: Naturalistic and laboratory studies of facial action and social communication
- 8 A neurobehavioral approach to the recognition of facial expressions in infancy
- 9 A dynamic systems approach to infant facial action
- Part IV With a psychological and social focus
- Part V Integrative summary
- Author index
- Subject index
- Studies in Emotion and Social Interaction
6 - Animal sounds and human faces: Do they have anything in common?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Contributors
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Three broad theoretical frameworks
- Part III With a biological and developmental focus
- 6 Animal sounds and human faces: Do they have anything in common?
- 7 Yawns, laughs, smiles, tickles, and talking: Naturalistic and laboratory studies of facial action and social communication
- 8 A neurobehavioral approach to the recognition of facial expressions in infancy
- 9 A dynamic systems approach to infant facial action
- Part IV With a psychological and social focus
- Part V Integrative summary
- Author index
- Subject index
- Studies in Emotion and Social Interaction
Summary
A survey of the literature reveals that many who have commented on the signaling of animals ascribe to the view that all of their communicative signals are manifestations of emotion or affect. If this view were correct, then animal signals would have much in common with certain human facial expressions, widely regarded by some, if not by all, as uniquely revealing signs of emotion. The prevalence of this interpretation of animal signals is evident in the comments displayed in Table 6.1 on the vocalizations of monkeys and apes, drawn from a wide range of disciplines. Either explicitly or implicitly, each of them assumes parallels with human expressions of emotion. One aim of a program of research extending over a period of 15 years has been to subject the interpretation of animal signals as emotion-based to a critical appraisal. This chapter reviews some of the evidence that has been forthcoming and the possibility that it bears on our understanding of human emotional expressions.
As a point of departure, we began our studies by consulting dictionary definitions of emotion, of which we take the following, from the Random House Dictionary of the English Language (1981, p. 467), to be representative. “Emotion: an affective state of consciousness in which joy, sorrow, fear, hate, or the like, is expressed, as distinguished from cognitive and volitional states of consciousness” – “usually accompanied by certain physiological changes, as increased heartbeat, respiration or the like, and often overt manifestation, as crying, shaking, etc.”
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- The Psychology of Facial Expression , pp. 133 - 157Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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