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Electrical stimulation of facial muscles influences how people perceive others' emotions, study finds
Psychology research suggests that the human body, particularly the muscles on our face, plays a key part in the processing of others' emotions. For instance, past findings suggest that when we see ...
From left are Professor Jiyun Kim and Jin Pyo Lee in the Department of Material Science and Engineering at UNIST. A groundbreaking technology that can recognize human emotions in real time has been ...
This study addresses the challenges in teacher emotion recognition (TER), namely the lack of high-quality multimodal datasets and insufficient modeling of common and discriminative emotional features ...
Facial expressions of emotion—such as the joyful smile you might display when encountering a friend or your angry frown when being cut off in traffic—are powerful social signals that are able to evoke ...
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