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1.
Science ; 323(5918): 1222-6, 2009 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19251631

ABSTRACT

In common parlance, moral transgressions "leave a bad taste in the mouth." This metaphor implies a link between moral disgust and more primitive forms of disgust related to toxicity and disease, yet convincing evidence for this relationship is still lacking. We tested directly the primitive oral origins of moral disgust by searching for similarity in the facial motor activity evoked by gustatory distaste (elicited by unpleasant tastes), basic disgust (elicited by photographs of contaminants), and moral disgust (elicited by unfair treatment in an economic game). We found that all three states evoked activation of the levator labii muscle region of the face, characteristic of an oralnasal rejection response. These results suggest that immorality elicits the same disgust as disease vectors and bad tastes.


Subject(s)
Emotions/physiology , Facial Muscles/physiology , Morals , Social Values , Taste , Anger , Electromyography , Facial Expression , Female , Games, Experimental , Humans , Motor Activity , Young Adult
2.
Neuropsychologia ; 45(1): 152-62, 2007 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16765997

ABSTRACT

Neuropsychological and neuroimaging evidence suggests that the human brain contains facial expression recognition detectors specialized for specific discrete emotions. However, some human behavioral data suggest that humans recognize expressions as similar and not discrete entities. This latter observation has been taken to indicate that internal representations of facial expressions may be best characterized as varying along continuous underlying dimensions. To examine the potential compatibility of these two views, the present study compared human and support vector machine (SVM) facial expression recognition performance. Separate SVMs were trained to develop fully automatic optimal recognition of one of six basic emotional expressions in real-time with no explicit training on expression similarity. Performance revealed high recognition accuracy for expression prototypes. Without explicit training of similarity detection, magnitude of activation across each emotion-specific SVM captured human judgments of expression similarity. This evidence suggests that combinations of expert classifiers from separate internal neural representations result in similarity judgments between expressions, supporting the appearance of a continuous underlying dimensionality. Further, these data suggest similarity in expression meaning is supported by superficial similarities in expression appearance.


Subject(s)
Emotions/physiology , Facial Expression , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Artificial Intelligence , Computer Simulation , Discrimination, Psychological , Humans , Models, Neurological , Photic Stimulation
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