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Original Articles

Facial expressions, smile types, and self-report during humour, tickle, and pain

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Pages 655-669 | Published online: 09 Sep 2010

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Read on this site (4)

Caleb Warren, Erin Percival Carter & A. Peter McGraw. (2019) Being funny is not enough: the influence of perceived humor and negative emotional reactions on brand attitudes. International Journal of Advertising 38:7, pages 1025-1045.
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Jeff T. Larsen & Jennifer D. Green. (2013) Evidence for mixed feelings of happiness and sadness from brief moments in time. Cognition and Emotion 27:8, pages 1469-1477.
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Giulio E. Lancioni, Domenico Bellini, Doretta Oliva, Nirbhay N. Singh, Mark F. O’reilly, Russell Lang, Robert Didden & Andrea Bosco. (2011) Persons with multiple disabilities select environmental stimuli through a smile response monitored via camera-based technology. Developmental Neurorehabilitation 14:5, pages 267-273.
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Articles from other publishers (45)

Jacob Hornik, Matti Rachamim & Ori Grossman. (2023) A Tango of Two Dark Emotions: Mixed Reactions to Commercial Entities (Mis)fortunes. Customer Needs and Solutions 11:1.
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Chiara Mazzocconi & Jonathan Ginzburg. (2023) Growing up laughing: Laughables and pragmatic functions between 12 and 36 months. Journal of Pragmatics 212, pages 117-145.
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Elisabeth Ruiz‐Padial, María Moreno‐Padilla & Gustavo A. Reyes del Paso. (2023) Did you get the joke? Physiological, subjective and behavioral responses to mirth. Psychophysiology 60:6.
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Ivana Baltezarević & Radoslav Baltezarević. (2023) Negative effects of humor in marketing communications. Trendovi u poslovanju 11:2, pages 101-106.
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Sandra Proelss, Shimpei Ishiyama, Eduard Maier, Matthias Schultze-Kraft & Michael Brecht. (2022) The human tickle response and mechanisms of self-tickle suppression. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 377:1863.
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Eva G. Krumhuber & Arvid Kappas. (2022) More What Duchenne Smiles Do, Less What They Express. Perspectives on Psychological Science 17:6, pages 1566-1575.
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Daniel Mota-Rojas, Míriam Marcet-Rius, Asahi Ogi, Ismael Hernández-Ávalos, Chiara Mariti, Julio Martínez-Burnes, Patricia Mora-Medina, Alejandro Casas, Adriana Domínguez, Brenda Reyes & Angelo Gazzano. (2021) Current Advances in Assessment of Dog’s Emotions, Facial Expressions, and Their Use for Clinical Recognition of Pain. Animals 11:11, pages 3334.
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Alexander Mielke, Bridget M. Waller, Claire Pérez, Alan V. Rincon, Julie Duboscq & Jérôme Micheletta. (2021) NetFACS: Using network science to understand facial communication systems. Behavior Research Methods 54:4, pages 1912-1927.
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Sven Svebak. (2021) The importance of skin area and gender in ticklishness. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology 62:5, pages 683-688.
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Jeffrey M. Girard, Jeffrey F. Cohn, Lijun Yin & Louis-Philippe Morency. (2021) Reconsidering the Duchenne Smile: Formalizing and Testing Hypotheses About Eye Constriction and Positive Emotion. Affective Science 2:1, pages 32-47.
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Jared D. Martin, Adrienne Wood, William T. L. Cox, Scott Sievert, Robert Nowak, Eva Gilboa-Schechtman, Fangyun Zhao, Zachary Witkower, Andrew T. Langbehn & Paula M. Niedenthal. (2021) Evidence for Distinct Facial Signals of Reward, Affiliation, and Dominance from Both Perception and Production Tasks. Affective Science 2:1, pages 14-30.
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Caleb Warren, Adam Barsky & A. Peter McGraw. (2020) What Makes Things Funny? An Integrative Review of the Antecedents of Laughter and Amusement. Personality and Social Psychology Review 25:1, pages 41-65.
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Justyna K. Hinchcliffe, Michael Mendl & Emma S.J. Robinson. (2020) Rat 50 kHz calls reflect graded tickling-induced positive emotion. Current Biology 30:18, pages R1034-R1035.
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Lei Wang & Jorge A. Gonzalez. (2020) Racial/ethnic and national origin bias in SET. International Journal of Organizational Analysis 28:4, pages 843-855.
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Brian Parkinson. 2019. Heart to Heart. Heart to Heart.
Jeffrey M. Girard, Gayatri Shandar, Zhun Liu, Jeffrey F. Cohn, Lijun Yin & Louis-Philippe Morency. (2019) Reconsidering the Duchenne Smile: Indicator of Positive Emotion or Artifact of Smile Intensity?. Reconsidering the Duchenne Smile: Indicator of Positive Emotion or Artifact of Smile Intensity?.
Salvatore Attardo. 2019. Emotion in Discourse. Emotion in Discourse 189 212 .
Taylan Sen, Md Kamrul Hasan, Minh Tran, Matthew Levin, Yiming Yang & Mohammed Ehsan Hoque. (2018) Say CHEESE: Common Human Emotional Expression Set Encoder and Its Application to Analyze Deceptive Communication. Say CHEESE: Common Human Emotional Expression Set Encoder and Its Application to Analyze Deceptive Communication.
Lilah Inzelberg, David Rand, Stanislav Steinberg, Moshe David-Pur & Yael Hanein. (2018) A Wearable High-Resolution Facial Electromyography for Long Term Recordings in Freely Behaving Humans. Scientific Reports 8:1.
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. 2018. The Psychology of Humor. The Psychology of Humor 373 510 .
Cátia Caeiro, Kun Guo & Daniel Mills. (2017) Dogs and humans respond to emotionally competent stimuli by producing different facial actions. Scientific Reports 7:1.
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Sarah Auerbach. (2017) Are Clowns Good for Everyone? The Influence of Trait Cheerfulness on Emotional Reactions to a Hospital Clown Intervention. Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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Konomi Ishijima & Koichi Negayama. (2017) Development of mother–infant interaction in tickling play: The relationship between infants’ ticklishness and social behaviors. Infant Behavior and Development 49, pages 161-167.
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Jennifer Hofmann, Tracey Platt & Willibald Ruch. (2017) Laughter and Smiling in 16 Positive Emotions. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 8:4, pages 495-507.
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Adrienne Wood, Jared Martin & Paula Niedenthal. (2017) Towards a social functional account of laughter: Acoustic features convey reward, affiliation, and dominance. PLOS ONE 12:8, pages e0183811.
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Disa A. Sauter. (2017) The Nonverbal Communication of Positive Emotions: An Emotion Family Approach. Emotion Review 9:3, pages 222-234.
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Sylvia D Kreibig & James J Gross. (2017) Understanding mixed emotions: paradigms and measures. Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences 15, pages 62-71.
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Jeff T. Larsen. (2017) Holes in the Case for Mixed Emotions. Emotion Review 9:2, pages 118-123.
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Caleb Warren & A. Peter McGraw. (2015) What makes things humorous. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112:23, pages 7105-7106.
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Mayo Suzuki & Hikari Yamashita. (2015) Laterality of Tickle Sensation Produced by Self-Stimulation,. Comprehensive Psychology 4, pages 27.CP.4.17.
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Willibald Ruch, Jennifer Hofmann & Tracey Platt. (2015) Individual differences in gelotophobia and responses to laughter-eliciting emotions. Personality and Individual Differences 72, pages 117-121.
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HUI-CHIN HSU, SUNEETI NATHANI IYER & ALAN FOGEL. (2013) Effects of social games on infant vocalizations*. Journal of Child Language 41:1, pages 132-154.
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Miriam Kunz, Kenneth Prkachin & Stefan Lautenbacher. (2013) Smiling in Pain: Explorations of Its Social Motives. Pain Research and Treatment 2013, pages 1-8.
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Susanne Quadflieg, Nicolas Vermeulen & Bruno Rossion. (2013) Differential Reliance on the Duchenne Marker During Smile Evaluations and Person Judgments. Journal of Nonverbal Behavior 37:2, pages 69-77.
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Rainer Reisenzein, Markus Studtmann & Gernot Horstmann. (2013) Coherence between Emotion and Facial Expression: Evidence from Laboratory Experiments. Emotion Review 5:1, pages 16-23.
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Paul M. Brunet & Roderick Cowie. (2012) Towards a conceptual framework of research on social signal processing. Journal on Multimodal User Interfaces 6:3-4, pages 101-115.
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C.R. Harris. 2012. Encyclopedia of Human Behavior. Encyclopedia of Human Behavior 611 615 .
Fay C. M. Geisler & Hannelore Weber. (2010) Harm that does not hurt: Humour in coping with self-threat. Motivation and Emotion 34:4, pages 446-456.
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A. Peter McGraw & Caleb Warren. (2010) Benign Violations. Psychological Science 21:8, pages 1141-1149.
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Hyun-Soo Khang, Ki-Seon Lim & Dong-Kyoon Han. (2010) Difference of fMRI between the Tickling and Sensory Stimulation Using 3.0 Tesla MRI. The Journal of the Korea Contents Association 10:2, pages 286-294.
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Zara Ambadar, Jeffrey F. Cohn & Lawrence Ian Reed. (2008) All Smiles are Not Created Equal: Morphology and Timing of Smiles Perceived as Amused, Polite, and Embarrassed/Nervous. Journal of Nonverbal Behavior 33:1, pages 17-34.
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Magnus Söderlund & Sara Rosengren. (2008) Revisiting the smiling service worker and customer satisfaction. International Journal of Service Industry Management 19:5, pages 552-574.
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. 2007. The Psychology of Humor. The Psychology of Humor 373 420 .
Paul Ekman & Maureen O'Sullivan. (2006) From flawed self‐assessment to blatant whoppers: the utility of voluntary and involuntary behavior in detecting deception. Behavioral Sciences & the Law 24:5, pages 673-686.
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Caleb Warren & A. Peter McGraw. (2015) Benign Violations: Making Immoral Behavior Funny. SSRN Electronic Journal.
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