Nature of Things. Face Value /

This fascinating documentary on facial kinetics begins with a brief history of the field. In the 17th century, the fourteen bones and eighty muscles of the face were scrutinized to determine the correlation between facial expressions and such factors as criminality, personality and superiority. Rese...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Lang, Robert (Director, Producer), Suzuki, David, 1936- (Narrator)
Format: Electronic Video
Language:English
Published: New York : Filmakers Library, 1990.
Series:Psychological experiments online
Subjects:
Online Access: Full text (Wentworth users only)
Description
Summary:This fascinating documentary on facial kinetics begins with a brief history of the field. In the 17th century, the fourteen bones and eighty muscles of the face were scrutinized to determine the correlation between facial expressions and such factors as criminality, personality and superiority. Researchers such as Paul Ekman probe facial expressions for clues to emotional states. His work in New Guinea validates Darwin's theories that facial expressions are part of evolution and universally understood. Neuropsychologist Nancy Etcoff demonstrates her research with people who can no longer recognize faces (agnosis) and she reviews the parts of the brain where facial recognition is located. Psychologist Andrew Meltzoff's work with infants demonstrates that two-week-old babies can recognize facial expressions and imitate them.
Item Description:Title from resource description page (viewed June 05, 2015).
Physical Description:1 online resource (38 min.).
Playing Time:00:38:00
Language:In English.
Accessibility Note:Closed captioning in English