Extreme Pain And Pleasure Produce Basically The Same Facial Expressions
LatestJust to make your office just a liiiittle more sexually charged, the face you make when you’re having an orgasm might be interchangeable to the face you make when you get a paper cut, posits a new study out of The Hebrew University of Jerusalem that was printed in Science yesterday. Researchers showed 45 Princeton University students photos of tennis players who had just won or lost an important match. The students were divided into three groups: one looked at a full-body shot, one at only the body language, and one only at the facial expression. The last group was the only one who was unable to distinguish whether the game had been a victory or a disappointment for the tennis player, indicating that the reflections of of extreme joy and extreme anger on the human face is interchangeable when no context is provided. However, 80% of the students incorrectly believed that they could judge the players’ emotions by faces alone.
Even more interesting: researchers moved on to show students photos of close-up faces in “high-intensity situations,” e.g.