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According to some research it's Russians! And the least control over facial emotions?
marx2k, on 04/13/2008, -1/+0These are less human facial emotions and more anime-facial emotions.
Citation: David Oziem, Lisa Gralewski, Neill Campbell, Colin Dalton, David Gibson, Barry Thomas, "Synthesising Facial Emotions," tpcg, pp. 120-127, Theory and Practice of Computer Graphics 2004 ...
Culture is a determining factor when interpreting facial emotions. The study reveals that in cultures where emotional control is the standard, such as Japan, focus is placed on the eyes to interpret ...
Synthesising Facial Emotions (Make Corrections) David Oziem, Lisa Gralewski, Neill Campbell, ... @misc{ lisa-synthesising, author = "David Oziem Lisa", title = "Synthesising Facial Emotions", ...
Research has uncovered that culture is a determining factor when interpreting facial emotions. The study reveals that in cultures where emotional control is the standard, such as Japan, focus is ...
Synthesising Facial Emotions (Make Corrections) David Oziem, Lisa Gralewski, Neill Campbell, Colin Dalton, David Gibson,...
Processing facial emotions in adults with velo-cardio-facial syndrome: functional magnetic resonance imaging
Downloading the PDF version of: The British Journal of Psychiatry VAN AMELSVOORT et al. ... PDFs are designed to be printed out and read, but if you prefer to read them online, ...
MIT's Nexi robot expresses emotions with a highly mobile face. ... she has a more human face. Also, the WD-2 Face Morphing robot uses a much more flexible facial structure.
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