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Humans have very complex, deep, and nuanced emotions.
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Bummer! our face doesn't show them at all.
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Anthony Carboni here for DNews and you can usually tell how someone is feeling by their facial expression.
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There's a commonly held theory that across all cultures, humans actually only have six different emotional facial expressions.
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Happiness, sadness, fear, anger, surprise, and disgust.
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All this is based on some research by a psychologist named Paul Ekman based on a theory by Charles Darwin.
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Darwin thought that people worldwide must manifest emotions in the same way,
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And Ekman traveled around the world asking people from all types of cultures to show him those emotions.
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And the expressions always matched.
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He called it the Basic Emotion model, and he said that he could even use it to recognize a liar by the difference between an actual expression and the microexpressions made by someone attempting to mimic them without the actual feeling behind them.
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He even consulted with the CIA about it in the 70s to help their interrogators.
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The research has been pretty widely accepted since it debuted in 1969, but certain studies have shown otherwise.
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One showed people pictures of two scowling faces and said "Hey, do these people feel the same way?"
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And the answer was not always yes.
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Another showed people an angry face, but didn't give them "angry" as a choice.
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Those people were perfectly happy to choose "disgust" or "contempt" instead.
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So, it sounds like we might be too complex to fit into a model.
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But what if the model is actually too complex for our faces?
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New research by the University of Glasgow says that we've actually got four emotions that we universally express.
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Happiness and sadness are two of them, but fear and surprise are the same, and anger and disgust are the same.
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The study says that all humans begin with the same simple expressions of biologically-rooted signals.
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All the other details are added depending on the culture and society we live in.
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Smiling is always happy, frowning is always sad, scrunching our nose is the beginning of anger and disgust, though.
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And that comes from a basic need to show something displeasing or dangerous is happening, and it also stops us from inhaling harmful particles.
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Fear and surprise start the same too, with widening eyes - you take in more visual information, you assess your situation, you look for a potential escape.
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After those four basic emotions, everything else is actually cultural.
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As we spread out across the world, we created much more nuanced expressions to fit our societies.
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Studies show that Asian cultures use the eyes much more to identify emotion, while Europeans use their mouths much more.
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I went to Russia last year and people told me that I was smiling too much, and that it looked fake.
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I don't know if that's because I'm American or because they see me for the shame that I really am.
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You know what else I'm wondering?
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I've got a dog at home, and I feel like I could read his expressions, too.
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I wonder if they use the same emotions.