Social Engineering Blogs

An Aggregator for Blogs About Social Engineering and Related Fields

The Humintell Blog April 24, 2019

The Functions of Emotions

function of emotionsEmotions are surely important in our lives, but it is amazing to see just how foundational they really are in how we experience the world.

Humintell’s own Drs.  David Matsumoto and Hyisung Hwang put together a comprehensive book chapter exploring that very question. They emphasize the crucial role that emotions have in intrapersonal, interpersonal, and cultural contexts. This can show how emotions are critical both at the very micro-level of human life but also at the macro-social level as well!

The first of these, intrapersonal, focuses on how emotions operate internally, as opposed to interpersonal functions which shape how we interact with other people. In all of these contexts, emotions give meaning to events and inform who we are on a fundamental level.

At the intrapersonal level, emotions can help us respond to events and handle potentially dangerous situations. For instance, we need not rationally contemplate every situation and instead can rely on emotions, like disgust or fear, when we need to act quickly. This helps determine not only our behavior but also our physiological state, as our emotional response triggers physical reactions, like saliva reduction or increased blood flow.

Similarly, when we reflect on our memories, our emotions help frame them and determine how we conceptualize ourselves and our past. They create a sort of value-laden narrative which unites what would otherwise be loosely connected facts. This helps motivate us going forward, shaping what behaviors we practice, such as a desire to work hard to avoid past mistakes.

Emotions are at least as important interpersonally. They help us communicate information to other people and help us better understand other people and their intentions.

Our facial expressions convey social signals, not only about our emotional state but also about how we might act in the future. By reading other people’s expressions we can then better understand them, using emotions as a medium for that understanding.

Similarly, emotions play a huge role in understanding interpersonal relationships. When researchers examine the subtly displayed emotions of married couples, for instance, signs of contempt or disgust can significantly predict later behaviors, such as divorce.

But it is not just at these micro levels that emotions matter. In fact, emotions are key to understanding macro-level social and cultural concerns.

Our human societies rely on incredibly complex norms of behavior and require that people all over the world act within a coordinated and organized way. In many ways, this is rooted in emotional commitments. Our culture provides a system of norms and meanings that shape how we interface with the world.

Hopefully, this overview helps you see just how foundational emotions are in our lives. It is not just a matter of seeing the relevance of emotion in any one given situation, but instead it is necessary to see how emotions shape so many areas of our lives, individually and collectively.

Filed Under: Emotion

The Humintell Blog April 17, 2019

Jan van Hooff visits chimpanzee “Mama”, 59 yrs old and very sick. Emotional meeting

Can we recognize emotions amongst other species? Can they recognize ours?

If our emotional recognition skills expand to other species besides humans, that tells us a great deal about the universality and evolutionary basis of our expressions, including our basic emotions. In this amazing video, Dr. Jan van Hooff visits an elderly chimpanzee, Mama, whom he had known many years earlier. Take a minute to watch the video and look for the moment where she recognizes the scientist’s face!

The moment of recognition is pretty hard to miss, with Mama’s face lighting up in what would be considered an obvious smile in humans. Even her vocalizations indicate pleased surprise and clear recognition. Then, her behavior changes from lethargic and apparently depressed to engaged and more active.

This seems like clear evidence that Mama is experiencing a similar process as humans do when we recognize other faces, and this would not be surprising as many emotional expressions are common across primate species. In fact, past research has found similarities between primate and human gestures.

As we previously blogged on, many gestures are common between chimpanzees, bonobos, and humans. This includes triumphant postures but also shooing gestures. Many of these are deeply rooted in our evolutionary history as well.

That fact should probably not be surprising as chimpanzees also express emotions in similar ways, with remarkably similar laughs!

So, maybe your takeaway is that by learning effective facial and emotional recognition, you can recognize not just humans but chimpanzees as well!

 

Filed Under: Emotion

The Humintell Blog April 10, 2019

The Makings of a Lie Detector

Lie detection is tough for a lot of people, but why do some people happen to just be better at it than others?

This is an important question not just in our attempts to understand how to detect deception but also in efforts to better understand the role of emotional recognition in lie detection. A new study in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin sought to disentangle various features of emotional recognition as a way of explaining variations in participants’ abilities to detect deception.

The study authors look at several variables that could explain variation in deception detection. One is “Theory of Mind” which looks at an individual’s general ability to read others’ mental states. Similarly, they looked at emotional intelligence which, while similar to Theory of Mind, focuses more on interpersonal competency and emotional recognition.

It is important to distinguish truth detection from deception detection. This should make sense intuitively, as we often get a clear intuitive sense that we are being lied to, but that doesn’t mean we always have an affirmative sense of another person’s truth-telling. Instead, we often just don’t feel lied to and conclude they are telling the truth.

They also distinguished between “high-stakes” and “low-stakes” deception, under the hypothesis that behaviors would be significantly different between the two. Namely, they note that past research has found that people tend to believe others most in low-stakes scenarios, while they become more discerning when the states get higher.

In order to explore the relationships between those topics, the study authors performed an experiment on over 100 participants. In the experiment, each participant was asked to review a series of videos of individuals speaking to high profile events, such as cases of alleged murder. Half of these were incidents of deception.

After watching each video, the participants were asked to determine who was telling the truth and who was not. Because emotional intelligence and other variables were measured by a pre-treatment series of questionnaires and tests, the researchers were able to explore statistical relationships between those emotional traits and rates of accuracy.

Overall, they did find that truth and deception detection were different as suspected, with different predictors proving significant for each. For instance, Theory of Mind accounted for much deception detection variance and emotionally intelligent participants often felt too much sympathy for liars.

This distinction seems rooted in the need for detached reasoning in detecting deception. While recognizing and understanding emotions is helpful , it often must be paired with a calculated and logical approach. This can be difficult for those with high levels of empathy, even though they tend to be good at noticing emotions like guilt.

Hopefully, this gives you some more information on what makes a good lie detector, but also come check out our new website dedicated to deception detection for more!

Filed Under: Deception, Emotion

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