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Dive into the research topics where Wallace V. Friesen is active.

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Featured researches published by Wallace V. Friesen.


Semiotica | 1969

The Repertoire of Nonverbal Behavior: Categories, Origins, Usage, and Coding

Paul Ekman; Wallace V. Friesen

Ir we arc to understand fully any instance of a persons non-verbal behavior that is, any movement or position of the face and/or the bodywe must discover how that behavior became part of the penons repertoire, the circumstances of its usc, and the rules which explain how the behavior contains or conveys information. We will call these three fundamental considerations ORIGIN, USAGE. and CODING. The interrelationships among and the differences within these three aspects of nonverbal behavior are extremely complex. The task of unraveling nonverbal behavior in these terms is enormously difficult; and it becomes impossible if we fail to consider the possibility of multiple categories of nonverbal behavior. The need to develop such a categorical scheme bas emerged from the results of our empirical studies over the past eight years, and has been crystallized by our two current research projects, the study of crosscultural differences in nonverbal behavior, and the study of nonverbal leakage of information during deceptive situations. We will briefly trace how some of the findings raised questions which led us to attempt to


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1990

Approach-Withdrawal and Cerebral Asymmetry: Emotional Expression and Brain Physiology I

Richard J. Davidson; Paul Ekman; Clifford D. Saron; Joseph A. Senulis; Wallace V. Friesen

In this experiment, we combined the measurement of observable facial behavior with simultaneous measures of brain electrical activity to assess patterns of hemispheric activation in different regions during the experience of happiness and disgust. Disgust was found to be associated with right-sided activation in the frontal and anterior temporal regions compared with the happy condition. Happiness was accompanied by left-sided activation in the anterior temporal region compared with disgust. No differences in asymmetry were found between emotions in the central and parietal regions. When data aggregated across positive films were compared to aggregate negative film data, no reliable differences in brain activity were found. These findings illustrate the utility of using facial behavior to verify the presence of emotion, are consistent with the notion of emotion-specific physiological patterning, and underscore the importance of anterior cerebral asymmetries for emotions associated with approach and withdrawal.


Psychiatry MMC | 1969

NONVERBAL LEAKAGE AND CLUES TO DECEPTION

Paul Ekman; Wallace V. Friesen

Abstract : Research relevant to psychotherapy regarding facial expression and body movement, has shown that the kind of information which can be gleaned from the patients words - information about affects, attitudes, interpersonal styles, psychodynamics - can also be derived from his concomitant nonverbal behavior. The study explores the interaction situation, and considers how within deception interactions differences in neuroanatomy and cultural influences combine to produce specific types of body movements and facial expressions which escape efforts to deceive and emerge as leakage or deception clues.


Science | 1969

Pan-Cultural Elements in Facial Displays of Emotion

Paul Ekman; Sorenson Er; Wallace V. Friesen

Observers in both literate and preliterate cultures chose the predicted emotion for photographs of the face, although agreement was higher in the literate samples. These findings suggest that the pan-cultural element in facial displays of emotion is the association between facial muscular movements and discrete primary emotions, although cultures may still differ in what evokes an emotion, in rules for controlling the display of emotion, and in behavioral consequences.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1987

Universals and cultural differences in the judgments of facial expressions of emotion.

Paul Ekman; Wallace V. Friesen; Maureen O'Sullivan; Anthony W.H. Chan; Irene Diacoyanni-Tarlatzis; Karl G. Heider; Rainer Krause; William Ayhan LeCompte; Tom Pitcairn; Pio E. Ricci-Bitti; Klaus R. Scherer; Masatoshi Tomita; Athanase Tzavaras

We present here new evidence of cross-cultural agreement in the judgement of facial expression. Subjects in 10 cultures performed a more complex judgment task than has been used in previous cross-cultural studies. Instead of limiting the subjects to selecting only one emotion term for each expression, this task allowed them to indicate that multiple emotions were evident and the intensity of each emotion. Agreement was very high across cultures about which emotion was the most intense. The 10 cultures also agreed about the second most intense emotion signaled by an expression and about the relative intensity among expressions of the same emotion. However, cultural differences were found in judgments of the absolute level of emotional intensity.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1990

The Duchenne smile : emotional expression and brain physiology. II

Paul Ekman; Richard J. Davidson; Wallace V. Friesen

Facial expression, EEG, and self-report of subjective emotional experience were recorded while subjects individually watched both pleasant and unpleasant films. Smiling in which the muscle that orbits the eye is active in addition to the muscle that pulls the lip corners up (the Duchenne smile) was compared with other smiling in which the muscle orbiting the eye was not active. As predicted, the Duchenne smile was related to enjoyment in terms of occurring more often during the pleasant than the unpleasant films, in measures of cerebral asymmetry, and in relation to subjective reports of positive emotions, and other smiling was not.


Journal of Nonverbal Behavior | 1976

Measuring Facial Movement.

Paul Ekman; Wallace V. Friesen

A procedure has been developed for measuring visibly different facial movements. The Facial Action Code was derived from an analysis of the anatomical basis of facial movement. The method can be used to describe any facial movement (observed in photographs, motion picture film or videotape) in terms of anatomically based action units. The development of the method is explained, contrasting it to other methods of measuring facial behavior. An example of how facial behavior is measured is provided, and ideas about research applications are discussed.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1988

Smiles When Lying

Paul Ekman; Wallace V. Friesen; Maureen O'Sullivan

Subtle differences among forms of smiling distinguished when subjects were truthful and when they lied about experiencing pleasant feelings. Expressions that included muscular activity around the eyes in addition to the smiling lips occurred more often when people were actually enjoying themselves as compared with when enjoyment was feigned to conceal negative emotions. Smiles that included traces of muscular actions associated with disgust, fear, contempt, or sadness occurred more often when subjects were trying to mask negative emotions with a happy mask. When these differences among types of smiling were ignored and smiling was treated as a unitary phenomenon, there was no difference between truthful and deceptive behavior.


Psychology and Aging | 1991

Emotion, Physiology, and Expression in Old Age

Robert W. Levenson; Laura L. Carstensen; Wallace V. Friesen; Paul Ekman

Emotion-specific autonomic nervous system (ANS) activity was studied in 20 elderly people (age 71-83 years, M = 77) who followed muscle-by-muscle instructions for constructing facial prototypes of emotional expressions and relived past emotional experiences. Results indicated that (a) patterns of emotion-specific ANS activity produced by these tasks closely resembled those found in other studies with younger Ss, (b) the magnitude of change in ANS measures was smaller in older than in younger Ss, (c) patterns of emotion-specific ANS activity showed generality across the 2 modes of elicitation, (d) emotion self-reports and spontaneous production of emotional facial expressions that occurred during relived emotional memories were comparable with those found in younger Ss, (e) elderly men and women did not differ in emotional physiology or facial expression, and (f) elderly women reported experiencing more intense emotions when reliving emotional memories than did elderly men.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1993

Behavioral Markers and Recognizability of the Smile of Enjoyment

Mark G. Frank; Paul Ekman; Wallace V. Friesen

Ekman and Friesen (1982) predicted that smiles that express enjoyment would be marked by smoother zygomatic major actions of more consistent duration than the zygomatic major actions of nonenjoyment smiles. Study 1 measured the duration and smoothness of smiles shown by female subjects in response to positive emotion films while alone and in a social interaction. Enjoyment smiles in both situations were of more consistent duration and smoother than nonenjoyment smiles. In Study 2 observers who were shown videotapes of enjoyment and nonenjoyment smiles were able to accurately identify enjoyment smiles at rates greater than chance; moreover, accuracy was positively related to increased salience of orbicularis oculi action. In Study 3, another group of observers were asked to record their impressions of the smiling women shown in Study 2. These women were seen as more positive when they showed enjoyment compared with nonenjoyment smiles. These results provide further evidence that enjoyment smiles are entities distinct from smiles in general.

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Paul Ekman

University of California

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Maureen O'Sullivan

University of San Francisco

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Karl G. Heider

University of South Carolina

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Richard J. Davidson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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David Matsumoto

San Francisco State University

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