Schmidt,K.L., Liu, Y, and Cohn, J.F. (2006).
The role of structural facial asymmetry in asymmetry of
peak facial expressions. Laterality 11(6):540-561.
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Abstract
Asymmetric facial expression is generally attributed to asymmetry in movement,
but structural asymmetry in the face may also affect asymmetry of expression.
Asymmetry in posed expressions was measured using image-based approaches in
digitised sequences of facial expression in 55 individuals, N=16 men, N=39
women. Structural asymmetry (at neutral expression) was higher in men than
women and accounted for .54, .62, and .66 of the variance in asymmetry at peak
expression for joy, anger, and disgust expressions, respectively. Movement
asymmetry (measured by change in pixel values over time) was found, but was
unrelated to peak asymmetry in joy or anger expressions over the whole face and in
facial subregions relevant to the expression. Movement asymmetry was negatively
related to peak asymmetry in disgust expressions. Sidedness of movement
asymmetry (defined as the ratio of summed movement on the left to movement
on the right) was consistent across emotions within individuals. Sidedness was
found only for joy expressions, which had significantly more movement on the left.
The significant role of structural asymmetry in asymmetry of emotion expression
and the exploration of facial expression asymmetry have important implications for
evolutionary interpretations of facial signalling and facial expressions in general.
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