Blind People Use Same Emotional Expressions Because They Are Innate, Not Learned - Study

Authored by science20.com and submitted by glennten

Facial expressions of emotion are hardwired into our genes, according to a study published today in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. The research suggests that facial expressions of emotion are innate rather than a product of cultural learning. The study is the first of its kind to demonstrate that sighted and blind individuals use the same facial expressions, producing the same facial muscle movements in response to specific emotional stimuli.The study also provides new insight into how humans manage emotional displays according to social context, suggesting that the ability to regulate emotional expressions is not learned through observation.San Francisco State University Psychology Professor David Matsumoto compared the facial expressions of sighted and blind judo athletes at the 2004 Summer Olympics and Paralympic Games. More than 4,800 photographs were captured and analyzed, including images of athletes from 23 countries.These comparison photos of facial expressions show blind and sighted athletes who just lost a match for a medal. Photo: Bob Willingham"The statistical correlation between the facial expressions of sighted and blind individuals was almost perfect," Matsumoto said. "This suggests something genetically resident within us is the source of facial expressions of emotion."Matsumoto found that sighted and blind individuals manage their expressions of emotion in the same way according to social context. For example, because of the social nature of the Olympic medal ceremonies, 85 percent of silver medalists who lost their medal matches produced "social smiles" during the ceremony. Social smiles use only the mouth muscles whereas true smiles, known as Duchenne smiles, cause the eyes to twinkle and narrow and the cheeks to rise."Losers pushed their lower lip up as if to control the emotion on their face and many produced social smiles," Matsumoto said. "Individuals blind from birth could not have learned to control their emotions in this way through visual learning so there must be another mechanism. It could be that our emotions, and the systems to regulate them, are vestiges of our evolutionary ancestry. It's possible that in response to negative emotions, humans have developed a system that closes the mouth so that they are prevented from yelling, biting or throwing insults."

SalsaSamba on October 26th, 2018 at 19:53 UTC »

I once saw that blind people regardless of culture celebrate a goal in sports etc. the same way, standing up and raising the arms. It is very interesting if you think how something like that came to be.

Amperage21 on October 26th, 2018 at 18:14 UTC »

There is lots of research on cross cultural facial expressions. Last time I checked, there are at least six seven universal facial expressions that any human in the world will recognize instantly.

Edit: looks like seven: https://www.apa.org/science/about/psa/2011/05/facial-expressions.aspx

Mechasteel on October 26th, 2018 at 18:03 UTC »

I wonder if being blind makes it harder to hide one's facial expressions? They'd depend on proprioception to notice most facial expressions and wouldn't see which are the most visually obvious and might not even be aware of them. This could perhaps make blind people more honest.