“Connectivity Creates Costs: How Smartphones Hinder Well-Being“ by C. Nathan DeWall and “Repeating Is Believing: Understanding the Repetition-Induced Truth Effect“ by Cindi May and Michael Scullin.
A new scientific report finds that facial movements are an inexact gauge of a person’s feelings, behaviors, and intentions.
Software that purportedly reads emotions in faces is being deployed or tested for surveillance, hiring, market research, and more. But a report in Psychological Science in the Public Interest finds that facial movements are an inexact gauge of a person’s feelings, behaviors or intentions.