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Labeling Emotion01:20

Labeling Emotion

232
Emotional labeling is a cognitive process that involves identifying and naming one's emotions, such as anger, fear, happiness, or sadness. It allows individuals to recognize and express their internal emotional states, a critical aspect of emotional regulation and communication. Labeling emotions requires more than mere recognition; it also involves drawing upon memory and contextual cues to understand the current situation and apply a corresponding emotional label. For instance, feeling...
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Physiology of Emotion01:20

Physiology of Emotion

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The physiology of emotions is a multifaceted process involving the autonomic nervous system, brain structures, hormones, and neurotransmitters. This intricate interplay dictates how emotions manifest in the body and influence behavior.
Autonomic Nervous System
The autonomic nervous system (ANS) plays a critical role in emotional responses by regulating involuntary physiological functions. It consists of two main components: the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems. The sympathetic system...
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Facial Feedback Hypothesis01:24

Facial Feedback Hypothesis

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Charles Darwin proposed that facial expressions are an evolutionary adaptation for communication. He argued that these expressions are not influenced by culture but are universal across species. For example, a snarling expression with exposed teeth signals a threat in many animals, including humans. Darwin also suggested that displaying an emotion can intensify the feeling. Smiling, for example, could enhance one's sense of happiness. This idea laid the foundation for understanding the role...
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Emotional Expression01:26

Emotional Expression

358
Emotional expression encompasses how individuals convey their emotions through verbal communication and non-verbal cues. These non-verbal actions include facial expressions, body language, and physical gestures, such as frowning or smiling. Among these, facial expressions play a crucial role in emotional expression and are understood universally, indicating a biological basis for how humans communicate emotions.
Universal Facial Expressions
Psychologist Paul Ekman identified seven basic...
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Cognitive Theories: Schachter-Singer Theory of Emotion01:20

Cognitive Theories: Schachter-Singer Theory of Emotion

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Stanley Schachter and Jerome Singer proposed the two-factor theory of emotion, which emphasizes the interplay between physiological arousal and cognitive labeling in forming emotional experiences. This theory suggests that emotions are not simply a result of physiological responses but rather a combination of these responses and the individual's cognitive interpretation of them.
Physiological Arousal and Cognitive Labeling
According to this theory, when an individual experiences...
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Physiological Theories: James-Lange Theory of Emotion01:16

Physiological Theories: James-Lange Theory of Emotion

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The James-Lange theory of emotion, proposed by William James and Carl Lange in the late 19th century, asserts that emotions are the result of physiological reactions to external stimuli. Contrary to the traditional view, which suggests that emotions directly arise from the perception of stimuli, this theory proposes that emotions occur as a consequence of the body's responses to such stimuli. According to this framework, an emotional experience is a cognitive interpretation of physiological...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Sep 5, 2025

Exploring the Use of Isolated Expressions and Film Clips to Evaluate Emotion Recognition by People with Traumatic Brain Injury
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Exploring the Use of Isolated Expressions and Film Clips to Evaluate Emotion Recognition by People with Traumatic Brain Injury

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Subjective Evaluation of Basic Emotions from Audio-Visual Data.

Sudarsana Reddy Kadiri1, Paavo Alku1

  • 1Department of Signal Processing and Acoustics, Aalto University, Otakaari 3, FI-00076 Espoo, Finland.

Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
|July 9, 2022
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Human emotion perception is crucial for developing emotion-aware systems. Studies show audio-visual data significantly impacts emotion recognition accuracy, highlighting the need for specialized features.

Keywords:
emotion analysisemotion recognitionemotion synthesisfeature extractionnaturalistic audio–visual emotion database

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Area of Science:

  • Human-Computer Interaction
  • Affective Computing
  • Cognitive Science

Background:

  • Developing effective emotion-aware systems requires understanding human affective states.
  • Realistic human-computer interaction necessitates accurate emotion perception from multi-modal data.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the perception of emotions in naturalistic human interactions using audio-visual data.
  • To evaluate emotion perception accuracy across audio-alone, video-alone, and audio-visual modalities.
  • To identify the impact of different data types on recognizing basic emotions and dimensional affective states.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized the IIIT-H Audio-Visual Emotion (IIIT-H AVE) database, featuring naturalistic audio-visual data from TV broadcasts.
  • Conducted perceptual tests on audio-alone, video-alone, and combined audio-visual data.
  • Evaluated perception of four basic emotions (angry, happy, neutral, sad) and two dimensions (arousal, valence) via category and dimensional labeling.

Main Results:

  • Participant emotion perception varied significantly across audio-alone, video-alone, and audio-visual conditions.
  • Audio-visual data generally yielded different perception results compared to unimodal data.
  • The study identified distinct patterns in emotion recognition based on the sensory input.

Conclusions:

  • The modality of emotional expression (audio, video, or both) critically influences human perception.
  • Emotion-specific features are vital for developing robust and accurate emotion-aware systems.
  • Future systems should leverage multi-modal emotional cues for enhanced performance in realistic scenarios.