Researchers identify facial expression for anxiety

January 16, 2012, King's College London
Researchers identify facial expression for anxiety
Anxiety (1); Happiness (2); Surprise (5); Interest (4)

(Medical Xpress) -- Researchers from the Institute of Psychiatry (IoP) at King's College London have, for the first time, identified the facial expression of anxiety. The facial expression for the emotion of anxiety comprises an environmental scanning look that appears to aid risk assessment. The research was published this week in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Dr. Adam Perkins, lead author of the study at the IoP at King's says: 'Our research group focuses on understanding the causes of . No one knows exactly what anxiety is. However many animal studies link it to risk assessment behaviour, suggesting anxiety can be explained as a defensive adaptation. We wanted to see if this was also the case in humans.'

The researchers described specific scenarios likely to elicit standard emotions, such as happiness, sadness, anger, disgust and surprise to a group of participants.  They also described scenarios containing ambiguous threats, which are known to elicit risk assessment and anxiety in rodents. Participants were asked to pose whatever facial expression they judged appropriate to the scenarios. A second group of individuals were shown photos and videos of the generated in response to the scenarios and asked to match the facial expressions back to the original selection of scenarios. They were also asked to generate an emotion label for each facial expression that they matched to a scenario. 

0% buffered00:00Current time00:00

Facial expression images were correctly matched in 89% of emotive scenario presentations on average. The facial expression generated in response to an ambiguous threat scenario was correctly matched to ambiguously threatening scenarios in 90% of scenario presentations. 

A third group of participants preferentially matched this facial expression with the label anxiety, not fear or any other major emotion. The characteristics of the facial expression for anxiety comprised darting eyes and head swivels that echoed the behaviour of anxious rodents. These results suggest that the anxious facial expression in humans serves to increase information gathering and knowledge of the potentially threatening environment through expanding the individual’s visual and auditory fields. Therefore the anxious facial expression appears to have both functional and social components - its characteristics help assess our surrounding environment, and communicate to others our state.

Dr. Perkins adds: 'We hope our findings will in due course help doctors more effectively diagnose anxiety in their patients. We also think the findings may also help security personnel identify individuals engaged in wrongdoing by means of their anxious, risk assessing facial expression.'

To watch the video associated with the study, please click here.

More information: Perkins, A. ‘A facial expression for anxiety’ Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (January 2012) doi: 10.1037/a0026825

Related Stories

Recommended for you

Study offers insight into how people judge good from bad

October 2, 2018
New research published in the scientific journal PLOS ONE sheds light on how people decide whether behavior is moral or immoral. The findings could serve as a framework for informing the development of artificial intelligence ...

Scientists uncover why you can't decide what to order for lunch

October 1, 2018
If you've ever found yourself staring at a lengthy restaurant menu and been completely unable to decide what to order for lunch, you have experienced what psychologists call choice overload. The brain, faced with an overwhelming ...

Children's violent video game play associated with increased physical aggressive behavior

October 1, 2018
Violent video game play by adolescents is associated with increases in physical aggression over time, according to a Dartmouth meta-analysis published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Child abuse could leave 'molecular scars' on its victims

October 1, 2018
Children who are abused might carry the imprint of that trauma in their cells—a biochemical marking that is detectable years later, according to new research from the University of British Columbia and Harvard University.

Familiar voices are easier to understand, even if we don't recognize them

October 1, 2018
Familiar voices are easier to understand and this advantage holds even if when we aren't able to identify who those familiar voices belong to, according to research in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for ...

Scientists use AI to develop better predictions of why children struggle at school

September 30, 2018
Scientists using machine learning—a type of artificial intelligence—with data from hundreds of children who struggle at school, identified clusters of learning difficulties which did not match the previous diagnosis the ...

2 comments

Adjust slider to filter visible comments by rank

Display comments: newest first

wealthychef
5 / 5 (2) Jan 16, 2012
I don't think this is reliable. It relies on the acting skills of participants in the first group, as shown by "Participants were asked to pose whatever facial expression they judged appropriate to the scenarios." Acting like you are anxious is not the same thing as how you act when you are anxious. That's how we know someone is acting.
jahbless
1 / 5 (1) Jan 16, 2012
Acting like you are anxious is not the same thing as how you act when you are anxious. That's how we know someone is acting.


This.
Commenting is closed for this article.