Psychofacial expression

Psychofacial expression

Face-to-face communication is the most effective way for people to communicate with psychological facial expressions, but in addition to verbal communication, nonverbal body symbols can also convey and transmit individual information to achieve the purpose of communication. Let's look at psychological facial expressions.

Psychofacial expression 1 calm facial expression

Calm facial expression is the most common expression, indicating that there is no great emotional change in the heart, which is a stable state, indicating that the heart is not disturbed by the external environment at the moment. A calm facial expression means that the facial muscles are in a relaxed state, distributed smoothly and evenly, and there is no big change, and the facial expression remains for the longest time.

A happy facial expression

When the mood reaches joy, people will smile unconsciously. Smile is a symbol of people's happiness, but not all smiles are the expression of inner happiness. Many times, people are affected by other factors, such as the environment, and there will be a fake smile. The really happy expression is that the corners of the mouth will rise, the eyes will become smaller, and the corners of the eyes will rise. This is the performance of a real smile. If only the corners of the mouth rise and the muscles around the eyes do not change, this is the performance of fake smile.

An angry facial expression

Angry expression is the expression that people show when they are angry. Anger will appear when people encounter unrealizable setbacks or when their inner needs are not met. Angry facial expressions are eyes wide open, pupils narrowed, eyebrows pressed down, nostrils unconsciously enlarged, and there will be actions such as breathing coarsening and clenching fists.

A sad facial expression

Sadness is a sign of depression. Negative emotions seriously affect people's mental health and do harm to their physical health. It is important to adjust your heart and get rid of depression and sadness. The sad facial expression is that facial muscles will droop as a whole, eyebrows will wrinkle slightly and eyelids will droop.

A surprised facial expression

When people suddenly receive some information without responding, they usually have surprised facial expressions. This is a sudden situation, people will instantly sort out their thoughts and face them, so the expression will last less than a second. The performance of surprise is that the eyes are wide open, the pupils are dilated, the upper eyelids and eyebrows will rise, and the mouth will open wide.

A facial expression of fear

When people are frightened or scared, they will have expressions of fear, which is an extension of the expression of surprise. Because fear will cause some physiological changes, facial expression muscles will become tense, eyebrows and eyelids will also rise, pupils will first become larger and then gradually smaller, and at the same time they will be accompanied by actions such as holding arms to protect themselves.

A contemptuous facial expression

When a person is above and disagrees with other people's behavior, there will be a contemptuous expression, which is a social expression. There is usually a psychological state of contempt, which will form some external behaviors. The biggest feature of contempt expression is that the corners of the mouth are raised, the eyes are slightly narrowed and the pupils are narrowed.

Disgusting facial expressions

The expression of this kind of expression is usually heartfelt disgust. When I meet someone, behavior or thing that makes me sick, I will have an expression of disgust. Disgusting facial expressions can lead to eyebrows pressed down, eyes slightly narrowed, mouth slightly opened with disgust, and a little teeth leaked out. In extreme disgust, eyes and mouth will be closed.

Psychofacial Expression 2 (1) Liars don't avoid each other's eyes as is commonly understood, but need eye contact to judge whether the other party believes what he says.

(2) "Have you been to her house?" "No, I haven't been to her house." The blunt repetition of the question is a typical lie.

(3) A man touching his nose shows what he wants to hide.

(4) Put your hand near the brow bone to show your shame.

(5) When narrating, the eyeball looks down to the left, indicating that the brain is remembering and telling the truth; Lies don't need a memory process.

(6) When you speak, a shoulder is stirred up, which means that you are extremely uncertain about what you say, which is a sign of lying.

(7) When you know perfectly well past ask, your eyebrows rise slightly.

(8) Flipping your wrist repeatedly means that you don't believe in yourself. (It's tossing and turning)

(9) When you lie, you may nod your head for an instant, and then shake your head to deny it.

(10) subconsciously flinched, indicating that you don't believe what you said.

(1 1) is in a hurry. An arm-to-arm object creates an obstacle between oneself and the other party, which is a manifestation of anxiety.

(12) There are no wrinkles in the corners of the eyes.

(13) The corners of the mouth are raised to show contempt.

(14) A flat mouth is a classic manifestation of making mistakes. Have no confidence in what you say.

(15) People touch their necks when telling lies, which is a classic mechanical reaction.

(16) A strong chin indicates that people are angry.

(17) When he answered the question, his eyes unconsciously glanced to the upper left, indicating that he was making up what he said. On the contrary, a glance at the lower right corner shows that he is recalling what he said.

(18) When he stated things, the details were not so clear. For example, the question is: "Where did you go this afternoon?" ! ? Answer: "I went drinking with a friend." "This means that he may be lying. If you answer, "Manager Zhang and I will go for a drink at 4 pm, and he will pay the bill. "A detailed answer like this means that it is unlikely to lie.

(19) When making a statement, the tone was peaceful and too slow. There are few grammatical mistakes, and the things that explain the statement have been prepared in advance.

(20) After being interrupted, it is difficult to pick up what you want to say. When you want to remind yourself to continue, you usually lie or don't hear it from other places.

(2 1) deliberately emphasizes that what you say is right, or is resistant to the correct guess of others.

Psychofacial expression 3 Happiness: The facial movements when people are happy include: upturned corners of the mouth, wrinkles on cheeks, eyelid contraction and crow's feet at the end of eyes.

Sadness: facial features include squinting, eyebrows tightening, corners of the mouth pulling down, chin lifting or tightening.

Fear: When you are afraid, your mouth and eyes are open, your eyebrows are raised and your nostrils are wide open.

Anger: at this time, eyebrows droop, forehead is tight, eyelids and lips are tight.

Aversion: The manifestations of disgust include sneering, rising upper lip, drooping eyebrows, squinting and so on.

Surprise: When you are surprised, your chin droops, your lips and mouth relax, your eyes are wide open, and your eyelids and eyebrows are slightly raised.

Contempt: the famous feature of contempt is that one side of the mouth is upturned and a sneer or smug smile is made.

All the micro-expressions and micro-actions of lying in behavioral psychology

1. When asking someone something:

(1) The shaking of the other person's shoulder shows that the other person's words are not confident, and his body and language are inconsistent, indicating that he is lying;

(2) The expression of surprise and fear on the face lasts for more than one second, which means it is false;

(3) The other person disdains your question, usually your question will be true.

2. When recalling:

(1) When recalling, the eyeball faces down to the left, and the lie does not need to be recalled;

(2) When the other person lies to you, there will be more eye contact to judge whether you believe his lies;

(3) Stiff repetition of your question is a typical way of lying. For example, ask, "Have you been to his house?" Answer "I haven't been to his house."

3. When talking or thinking:

(1) What is the purpose of putting your hand on your nose when talking or thinking?

(2) It is a sign of nervousness to keep your hand in your trouser pocket or against your thigh when talking;

(3) Describe a series of things that happened. If things are fabricated, he can say them in a fictional order, but he can't repeat them in flashback.

4. When smiling:

(1) Blinking when smiling means that you really think of something happy; There is no wrinkle in the corner of the fake smile;

(2) Wrong, the other person's mouth slightly rises and retracts; When you lie, you may nod your head for a moment and then shake your head to deny it.

5. Touch your hand:

(1) Touching hands is a gesture of self-consolation, which is used to try to dispel your doubts when you don't fully believe what you are saying.

(2) If you are really angry, shouting and striking the table with your hand should happen at the same time. If you are one after another, you may be pretending.