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The Humintell Blog July 10, 2015

FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin – New Article!

FBILEBHumintell is proud to be frequent contributors to the nation’s premier law enforcement publication, the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin.

Since 1935, The FBI has provided information on current law enforcement issues and research in the field to the larger policing community through this publication. Today, the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin remains one of the most widely read law enforcement-related publications in the world. It is distributed to law enforcement administrators in more than 105 countries and has an estimated readership of over 200,000 criminal justice professionals each month.

To view past articles featuring Humintell, please click the appropriate links below.

Evaluating Truthfulness and Detecting Deception
The Role of Violence in Predicting Violence
Reading People: Behavioral Anomalies and Investigative Interviewing
*NEW* Exploiting Verbal Markers of Deception Across Ethnic Lines: An Investigative Tool for Cross-Cultural Interviewing

Filed Under: Cross Culture, culture, Nonverbal Behavior, Science

peopletriggersblog June 28, 2015

SMB Impossible, Part II

In last month’s post, we got into a meditation on business turnaround principles, as demonstrated by the philosopher Robert Irvine (the host of Restaurant: Impossible). Restaurant: Impossible is my guilty pleasure, my Keeping Up With The Kardashians. And I thought it might be beneficial to try and divine real-world business lessons from a staged, pseudo-realistic […]

Filed Under: culture, Leadership, Organizational culture, profitability, restaurant impossible, robert irvine, Stress and Pressure, turnarounds

The Humintell Blog June 3, 2015

Humans May Have Less Hair So Emotions Are Easier To Read

Researchers believe humans evolved to have less hair on their faces than their primate relatives so it’s easier to read their moods. Humans are often considered hairless apes, but scientists are still debating why we’re not covered in hair like our primate relatives. No one has pinpointed exactly why this is, but evolutionary reasons include moving from cooler to warmer climates, or to free ourselves from lice and other parasites.

A third reason, proposed by neurobiologist Mark Changizi, suggests we lost our hair so it’s easier for others to read our expressions. Particularly, how our skin color changes and what it means, such as blushing. Humans are trichromats, which means we have three cones allowing us to detect light in the medium wavelength including a red and green mix. Known as color signaling, even the slightest changes in skin color are picked up by another person. These changes happen with varying levels of oxygen in the blood. If our faces were covered in hair, we wouldn’t be able to see these changes.

The fact that humans walk upright means more of our bodies are exposed, which explains why we’re also almost entirely hairless. Most mammals on the other hand, such as dogs, horses and bears, are dichromats with only two cones, and are only able to see short and long light wavelengths from blue and yellow blends. According to Changizi’s research, which involved 97 different primate species, the dichromats were furrier, while the trichromats had much more skin visible.

It’s possible, color signaling wasn’t the original reason humans began shedding their hairy exterior, and instead became a byproduct of it.

Humans May Have Less Hair So Emotions Are… by GeoBeats

Filed Under: culture, Nonverbal Behavior, Science

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