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Monday May 21

Watch Your Language

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Written by Galia Myron Friday, 29 January 2010 17:09

Caucasians and Asians read faces differently; the eyes don’t always have it.

  

A Canadian study has found that Asians and Caucasians tend to read faces differently, leading to variations in emotion and face recognition, and may help explain cross-cultural miscommunications. Study author Caroline Blais, PhD candidate from the Université de Montréal, contended in a public statement that previous studies—which stated that people collect information by studying mainly the eyes—always used Caucasian test subjects.

 


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