|
Paul Ekman
Paul Ekman was born in 1934 in Washington, DC, and grew up in Newark,
New Jersey, Washington, Oregon, and Southern California. He has been a
pioneer in the study of emotions and facial expressions, and is currently
professor of psychology in the Department of Psychiatry at the University
of California Medical School (UCSF).
Contrary to the belief of some anthropologists at the time including
Margaret Mead, Ekman found that at least some facial expressions and their
corresponding emotions are not culturally determined, but appear to universal
to human culture and thus presumably biological in origin, as Charles
Darwin had once theorized. Ekman's finding is now widely accepted by scientists.
Expressions he found to be universal included anger, disgust, fear, joy,
sadness and surprise. Ekman also reported facial "microexpressions"
that he claimed could be used to reliably detect lying, in an effort called
the Diogenes Project. He also developed the Facial Action Coding System
(FACS) to taxonomize every conceivable human facial expression.
Ekman reported facial "microexpressions" that he claimed could
be used to reliably detect lying, in an effort called the Diogenes Project.
He also developed the Facial Action Coding System (FACS) to taxonomize
every conceivable human facial expression.
In 2001, Ekman collaborated with John Cleese for the BBC documentary
series The Human Face.
|