FACIAL EXPRESSION

I will often fly great distances to meet someone face to face . . . . --Mark H. McCormack (What They Don't Teach You at Harvard Business School, 1984:9)
Sign. The act of communicating a mood, attitude, opinion, feeling, or other
message by contracting the muscles of the face.
Usage: The combined expressive force of our mobile chin, lip, cheek, eye, and brow muscles is without peer in the animal kingdom. Better than any body parts, our faces reveal emotions, opinions, and moods. While we learn to manipulate some expressions (see, e.g., SMILE), many unconscious facial expressions (see, e.g., LIP-POUT, TENSE-MOUTH, and TONGUE-SHOW) reflect our true feelings and hidden attitudes. Many facial expressions are universal, though most may be shaped by cultural usages and rules (see below, Culture).
Summary of facial expressions. 1. Nose: nostril flare (arousal). 2. Lips: grin (happiness,
affiliation, contentment); grimace (fear); lip-compression (anger, emotion, frustration); canine
snarl (disgust); lip-pout (sadness, submission, uncertainty); lip-purse (disagree); sneer (contempt; see below, Sneer). 3. Brows:
frown (anger, sadness, concentration); brow-raise (intensity). 4. Tongue: tongue-show (dislike,
disagree). 5. Eyelids: flashbulb eyes (surprise); widened (excitement, surprise); narrowed (threat,
disagreement); fast-blink (arousal); normal-blink (relaxed). 6. Eyes: big pupils (arousal, fight-or-flight); small pupils (rest-and-digest); direct-gaze (affiliate, threaten); gaze cut-off (dislike,
disagree); gaze-down (submission, deception); CLEMS (thought processing). (NOTE: See
individual entries elsewhere in The Nonverbal Dictionary.)
Child development. ". . . all children, regardless of cultural background, show the same maturation process when it comes to the basic emotional expressions [e.g., of anger, fear, and joy]" (Burgoon et al. 1989:350; see below, RESEARCH REPORTS).
Culture. "Japanese are taught to mask negative facial expressions with smiles and laughter and to display less facial affect overall, leading some Westerners to consider the Japanese inscrutable (Friesen, 1972; Morsbach, 1973; Ramsey, 1983)" (Burgoon et al. 1989:193).
Embryology. The nerves and muscles that open and close our mouth derive from the 1st pharyngeal
arch, while those that constrict our throat derive from the 3rd and 4th arches. In the disgusted
or "yuck-face," cranial VII contracts orbital muscles to narrow our eyes, as well as corrugator
and associated muscle groups to lower our brows. (Each of these muscles and nerves derives
from the 2nd pharyngeal arch.) We may express positive, friendly, and confident moods by
dilating our eye, nose, throat, and mouth openings--or we may show negative and anxious feelings
(as well as inferiority) by constricting them. Thus, the underlying principle of movement established in
the jawless fishes long ago remains much the same today: Unpleasant emotions and stimuli lead cranial
nerves to constrict our eye, nose, mouth, and throat openings, while more pleasant sensations
widen our facial orifices to incoming cues.
Evolution I. During the Jurassic period mammalian faces gradually became more mobile (and
far more expressive) than the rigid faces of reptiles. Muscles which earlier controlled the pharyngeal arches (i.e., the primitive "gill" openings) came to move mammalian lips, muzzles, scalps, and
external ear flaps. Nerve links from the emotional limbic system to the facial muscles--routed
through the brain stem's facial and trigeminal nerves (cranial VII and V)--enable us to
express joy, fear, sadness, surprise, interest, anger, and disgust today.
Evolution II. That a nose-stinging whiff of ammonium carbonate can cause our face to close up
in disgust shows how facial expression, smell, and taste are linked. The connection traces
back to the ancient muscles and nerves of the pharyngeal arches of our remote Silurian ancestors.
Pharyngeal arches were part of the feeding and breathing apparatus of the jawless fishes; sea
water was pumped in and out of the early pharynx through a series of gill slits at the animal's head
end. Each arch contained a visceral nerve and a somatic muscle to close the gill opening in case
dangerous chemicals were sensed. Very early in Nonverbal World, pharyngeal arches
were programmed to constrict in response to noxious tastes and smells.
Gag reflex. The ancient pattern is reflected in our faces today. In infants, e.g., a bitter taste shows
in lowered brows, narrowed eyes, and a protruded tongue--the yuck-face expression pictured on
poison-warning labels. A bad flavor causes baby to seal off her throat and oral cavity as cranial
nerves IX and X activate the pharyngeal gag reflex. Cranial V depresses the lower jaw to expel
the unpleasant mouthful (then closes it to keep food out), as cranial XII protrudes the tongue.
Gender differences. "Not surprisingly, women have a general superiority over men when it comes to decoding facial expressions . . ." (Burgoon et al. 1989:360).
Mimicking. Research indicates that mimicking another's face elicits empathy (Berstein et al., 2000).
Primatology. 1. In our closest primate relatives, the Old World monkeys and apes, the following facial expressions have been identified: alert face, bared-teeth gecker face, frowning bared-teeth scream face, lip-smacking face, pout face, protruded-lips face, relaxed face, relaxed open-mouth face, silent bared-teeth face, staring bared-teeth scream face, staring open-mouth face, teeth-chattering face, and tense-mouth face (Van Hooff 1967). 2. "Andrew (1963, 1965) held that facial expressions were originally natural physical response to stimuli. As these responses became endowed with the function of communication, they survived the various stages of evolution and were passed along to man" (Izard 1971:38; cf. NONVERBAL INDEPENDENCE).
Sneer. In the sneer, buccinator muscles (innervated by lower buccal branches of the facial nerve) contract to draw the lip corners sideward to produce a sneering "dimple" in the cheeks (the sneer may also be accompanied by a scornful, upward eye-roll). From videotape studies of nearly 700 married couples in sessions discussing their emotional relationships with each other, University of Washington psychologist, John Gottman has found the sneer expression (even fleeting episodes of the cue) to be a "potent signal" for predicting the likelihood of future marital disintegration (Bates and Cleese 2001). In this regard, the sneer may be decoded as an unconscious sign of contempt.
RESEARCH REPORTS: So closely is emotion tied to facial expression that it is hard to imagine
one without the other. 1. The first major scientific study of facial communication was published
by Charles Darwin in 1872. Darwin concluded that many expressions and their meanings (e.g.,
for astonishment, shame, fear, horror, pride, hatred, wrath, love, joy, guilt, anxiety, shyness, and
modesty) are universal: "I have endeavoured to show in considerable detail that all the chief
expressions exhibited by man are the same throughout the world" (Darwin 1872:355). 2. Sylvan
S. Tomkins found eight "basic" facial emotions: surprise, interest, joy, rage, fear, disgust, shame
and anguish (Tomkins 1962; Carroll Izard proposed a similar set of eight [Izard 1977]). 3.
Studies indicate that the facial expressions of happiness, sadness, anger, fear, surprise, disgust, and interest are universal across cultures (Ekman and Friesen
1971). 4. ". . . the emotion process includes a motor component subserved by innate neural programs which give rise to universal facial patterns. These patterns are subject to repression, suppression, and other consequences of socialization during childhood and adolescence" (Izard 1971:78).
E-Commentary I: The face entranced. "I have observed that when a woman absent-mindedly knots a lock of her hair on a finger or twists her ring on her finger, she often displays a trance like facial expression--i.e., her glance seems to look far away, her face has no expression, the right and left sides of her face are more symmetrical, she slows or loses her eye-blink, her pupils dilate, she half-opens her mouth as her chin falls down (her jaw appears relaxed), and her body appears fairly passive or motionless. I have seen the same nonverbal pattern in men, as well." --Dr. Marco Pacori, Institute of Analogic Psychology, Milano, Italy (3/29/00 9:17:37 AM Pacific Standard Time)
Neuro-notes III. 1. "The facial nucleus [of the albino rat] contains numerous medium-caliber, intensely immunoreactive dynorphin fibers, especially in the intermediate subdivision of the nucleus . . ." (Fallon and Ciofi 1990:31). 2. "The functions of these projections are unknown, but it is likely that dynorphin and enkephalin would modulate motor neurons enervating the facial musculature, especially those in the intermediate division controlling the zygomatic, platysma and mentalis muscles" (Fallon and Ciofi 1990:31-2).
See also BLANK FACE.
Copyright © 1998 - 2002 (David B. Givens/Center for Nonverbal Studies)
Detail of photo by Linda McCartney (copyright 1992 by MPL Communications Limited)