Tearing: Breakthrough in Human Emotional Signaling

Tearing is not a benign secretory correlate of sadness or other emotional state, but a potent visual cue that adds meaning to human facial expression, the tear effect . Although tearing (lacrimation) provides ocular lubrication and is a response to irritation in many animals, emotional tearing may b...

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Main Authors: Robert R. Provine, Kurt A. Krosnowski, Nicole W. Brocato
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2009-01-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/147470490900700107
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spelling doaj-84f07d27448d40fd86a2d2d173abbf212020-11-25T04:10:41ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492009-01-01710.1177/14747049090070010710.1177_147470490900700107Tearing: Breakthrough in Human Emotional SignalingRobert R. ProvineKurt A. KrosnowskiNicole W. BrocatoTearing is not a benign secretory correlate of sadness or other emotional state, but a potent visual cue that adds meaning to human facial expression, the tear effect . Although tearing (lacrimation) provides ocular lubrication and is a response to irritation in many animals, emotional tearing may be unique to humans and does not develop until several months after birth. This study provides the first experimental demonstration that tears are a visual signal of sadness by contrasting the perceived sadness of human facial images with tears against copies of those images that had the tears digitally removed. Tear removal produced faces rated as less sad. Anecdotal findings suggest further that tear-removal often produced faces of uncertain emotional valence, perhaps awe, concern, or puzzlement, not just less sad. Tearing signaled sadness and resolved ambiguity. The evolution and development of emotional tearing in humans provide a novel, potent and neglected channel of affective communication.https://doi.org/10.1177/147470490900700107
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert R. Provine
Kurt A. Krosnowski
Nicole W. Brocato
spellingShingle Robert R. Provine
Kurt A. Krosnowski
Nicole W. Brocato
Tearing: Breakthrough in Human Emotional Signaling
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Robert R. Provine
Kurt A. Krosnowski
Nicole W. Brocato
author_sort Robert R. Provine
title Tearing: Breakthrough in Human Emotional Signaling
title_short Tearing: Breakthrough in Human Emotional Signaling
title_full Tearing: Breakthrough in Human Emotional Signaling
title_fullStr Tearing: Breakthrough in Human Emotional Signaling
title_full_unstemmed Tearing: Breakthrough in Human Emotional Signaling
title_sort tearing: breakthrough in human emotional signaling
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2009-01-01
description Tearing is not a benign secretory correlate of sadness or other emotional state, but a potent visual cue that adds meaning to human facial expression, the tear effect . Although tearing (lacrimation) provides ocular lubrication and is a response to irritation in many animals, emotional tearing may be unique to humans and does not develop until several months after birth. This study provides the first experimental demonstration that tears are a visual signal of sadness by contrasting the perceived sadness of human facial images with tears against copies of those images that had the tears digitally removed. Tear removal produced faces rated as less sad. Anecdotal findings suggest further that tear-removal often produced faces of uncertain emotional valence, perhaps awe, concern, or puzzlement, not just less sad. Tearing signaled sadness and resolved ambiguity. The evolution and development of emotional tearing in humans provide a novel, potent and neglected channel of affective communication.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/147470490900700107
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