Faces and voices are more likely to be judged as male when they are angry, and as female when they are happy, new research has revealed. The study found that how we understand the emotional expression ...
Seeing faces in inanimate objects is a common occurrence but research from QUT has found our brains assign them the same biases as we would human faces. Known as ‘face pareidolia’, the phenomenon ...
University of Sydney provides funding as a member of The Conversation AU. To most of us, a dog showing its teeth is a pretty clear signal of threat. In 1872, Charles Darwin first suggested animals ...
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