On the systematic social role of expressed emotions: An embodied perspective

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (5):405-406 (2009)
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Abstract

Vigil suggests that expressed emotions are inherently learned and triggered in social contexts. A strict reading of this account is not consistent with the findings that individuals, even those who are congenitally blind, do express emotions in the absence of an audience. Rather, grounded cognition suggests that facial expressions might also be an embodied support used to represent emotional information

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