Title of article :
Posed versus spontaneous facial expressions are modulated by opposite cerebral hemispheres
Author/Authors :
Ross، نويسنده , , Elliott D. and Pulusu، نويسنده , , Vinay K.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
12
From page :
1280
To page :
1291
Abstract :
Clinical research has indicated that the left face is more expressive than the right face, suggesting that modulation of facial expressions is lateralized to the right hemisphere. The findings, however, are controversial because the results explain, on average, approximately 4% of the data variance. Using high-speed videography, we sought to determine if movement-onset asymmetry was a more powerful research paradigm than terminal movement asymmetry. The results were very robust, explaining up to 70% of the data variance. Posed expressions began overwhelmingly on the right face whereas spontaneous expressions began overwhelmingly on the left face. This dichotomy was most robust for upper facial expressions. In addition, movement-onset asymmetries did not predict terminal movement asymmetries, which were not significantly lateralized. The results support recent neuroanatomic observations that upper versus lower facial movements have different forebrain motor representations and recent behavioral constructs that posed versus spontaneous facial expressions are modulated preferentially by opposite cerebral hemispheres and that spontaneous facial expressions are graded rather than non-graded movements.
Keywords :
Spontaneous , upper , lower) , High-speed videography , hemispheric lateralization , Facial expressions (posed , Movement-onset asymmetry
Journal title :
Cortex
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
Cortex
Record number :
2301285
Link To Document :
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