Facial colour can broadcast our feelings: Study
Team Udayavani, Mar 21, 2018, 4:06 PM IST
Washington: Humans can read each other’s emotions from surprisingly tiny changes in facial colour, according to a study. Researchers at The Ohio State University in the US found that people are able to identify other people’s feelings up to 75 percent of the time – based solely on subtle shifts in blood flow colour around the nose, eyebrows, cheeks or chin.
The study, published in the journal PNAS, demonstrates a never-before-documented connection between the central nervous system and emotional expression in the face. It also enabled researchers to construct computer algorithms that correctly recognise human emotion via face colour up to 90 percent of the time.
“We identified patterns of facial colouring that are unique to every emotion we studied,” said Aleix Martinez, a professor at The Ohio State University. “We believe these colour patterns are due to subtle changes in blood flow or blood composition triggered by the central nervous system.
“Not only do we perceive these changes in facial colour, but we use them to correctly identify how other people are feeling, whether we do it consciously or not,” said Martinez. The researchers hope they will enable future forms of artificial intelligence to recognise and emulate human emotions.
They first took hundreds of pictures of facial expressions and separated the images into different colour channels that correspond to how human eyes see colour – a red-green channel and a blue-yellow channel. Using computer analysis, they found that emotions like “happy” or “sad” formed unique colour patterns.
Regardless of gender, ethnicity or overall skin tone, everybody displayed similar patterns when expressing the same emotion, the researchers said. To test whether colours alone could convey emotions – without smiles or frowns to go along with them – they superimposed the different emotional colour patterns on pictures of faces with neutral expressions.
They showed the neutral faces to 20 study participants and asked them to guess how the person in the picture was feeling, choosing from a list of 18 emotions. The emotions included basic ones like “happy” and “sad” as well as more complex ones such as “sadly angry” or “happily surprised,” researchers said.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
World Diabetes Day 2024: Kasturba Hospital Manipal Hosts Zumba Session at Malpe Beach to Raise Diabetes Awareness
World Diabetes Day: An overview of types of diabetes
World Diabetes Day: One-fourth of people living with diabetes in 2022 are in India, Lancet study estimates
Disruption in liver-brain communication behind overeating, Study claims
Acute Blood Shortage at Kasturba Hospital, Manipal: Donate blood and save lives
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
Congress’ guarantees implemented in Karnataka amid BJP’s false propaganda: Shivakumar
Followers of Sanatan Dharma will respond to those disrespecting it: Pawan Kalyan
Pushpa bows down to no one, but will do so for you: Allu Arjun to fans at ‘Pushpa 2’ trailer launch
Priyanka Gandhi leads roadshow in Nagpur
Sport teaches values beyond competition: Srihari Nataraj
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.