Asymmetry in Facial Expressions as a Function of Social Skills
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
This study investigated the relationship between social skills and facial asymmetry in facial expressions. Three-dimensional facial landmark data of facial expressions (neutral, happy, and angry) were obtained from Japanese participants (n=62). Following a facial expression task, each participant completed KiSS-18 (Kikuchi's Scale of Social Skills; Kikuchi, 2007). Using a generalized Procrustes analysis, faces and their mirror-reversed versions were represented as points on a hyperplane. The asymmetry of each individual face was defined as Euclidian distance between the face and its mirror reversed face on this plane. Subtraction of the asymmetry level of a neutral face of each individual from the asymmetry level of a target emotion face was defined as the index of "expression asymmetry" given by a particular emotion. Correlation coefficients of KiSS-18 scores and expression asymmetry scores were computed for both happy and angry expressions. Significant negative correlations between KiSS-18 scores and expression asymmetries were found for both expressions. Results indicate that the symmetry in facial expressions increases with higher level of social skills.
著者
-
Nagaoka Chika
Kokoro Research Center Kyoto University
-
KOMORI Masashi
Fac. Inf. Commun. Eng., Osaka Electro-Communication University
-
KAMIDE Hiroko
Faculty of Engineering Science, Osaka University
-
KAWAMURA Satoru
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology Kansai
関連論文
- Body movement synchrony in psychotherapeutic counseling: A study using the video-based quantification method
- The Relationship between Seating Locations and Instructor-Student Entrainment in a Classroom
- Asymmetry in Facial Expressions as a Function of Social Skills