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We get angry for all sorts of reasons: Logical and illogical reasons, obvious and not-so-obvious. Sometimes we get angry about one thing when we’re really upset about something else.
Attention How Dogs Respond to an Angry Expression on a Human Face Whether your dog looks at your face may depend upon your emotional expression. Posted February 8, 2017 ...
When anger expressions are perceived as inappropriate, "People tend to react negatively. They no longer want to concede," says Adam.
Chronological and reproductive age may significantly influence women's anger levels and their ability to manage them.
A new study published in Behaviour Research and Therapy suggests that people with high social anxiety are more accurate at ...
June 02, 2021 People with autism can read most facial expressions, but not anger New research examines the way the neurodevelopmental disorder affects the ability to accurately gauge emotions ...
If the dogs recognized expressions simply because of the presence or absence of teeth, then they wouldn’t be able identify angry or happy faces just from looking at the eyes, explains Müller.
Women feel more anger but express less of it as they age, according to a recent analysis in the journal Menopause.
The study, published in the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, suggested that those on the autism spectrum find it difficult to accurately identify angry facial expressions when they ...
The findings, now published in the journal Current Biology, show how non-primate mammals are able to hone in on emotional state cues of humans and then use the memory of this to guide future ...
In particular, autistic people tend to be less able to accurately identify anger from facial expressions produced at a normal 'real world' speed. The researchers also found that for people with a ...