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Anatomical Joy: The Duchenne Smile and the Neurological Impossibility of Faking Happiness
Coles
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Anatomical Joy: The Duchenne Smile and the Neurological Impossibility of Faking Happiness in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $32.99


By None
Anatomical Joy: The Duchenne Smile and the Neurological Impossibility of Faking Happiness in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $32.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
We have all encountered a smile that feels instinctively wrong, even if we cannot pinpoint why. The lips curve upward, the teeth are exposed, but the warmth is completely absent. Anatomical Joy dissects the neurological divide between social politeness and genuine emotion through the lens of the Duchenne smile. In the 19th century, neurologist Guillaume Duchenne applied electrical currents to patients' faces, mapping the exact muscles used for expressions. He discovered a profound biological truth: a true smile of joy requires the contraction of the orbicularis oculi muscle around the eyes—a muscle that is completely immune to conscious control. You can fake the mouth, but you cannot fake the eyes. This book explores the evolutionary psychology behind our facial architecture. It reveals why our brains developed a highly sensitive radar to detect the "pan-am smile" of polite deception, and how the facial feedback hypothesis proves that forcing a smile might not actually make you happier. Master the silent language of the face. By understanding the involuntary mechanics of true emotion, you can learn to spot deceptive social masks, read the authentic feelings of those around you, and foster deeper, unfeigned connections.
We have all encountered a smile that feels instinctively wrong, even if we cannot pinpoint why. The lips curve upward, the teeth are exposed, but the warmth is completely absent. Anatomical Joy dissects the neurological divide between social politeness and genuine emotion through the lens of the Duchenne smile. In the 19th century, neurologist Guillaume Duchenne applied electrical currents to patients' faces, mapping the exact muscles used for expressions. He discovered a profound biological truth: a true smile of joy requires the contraction of the orbicularis oculi muscle around the eyes—a muscle that is completely immune to conscious control. You can fake the mouth, but you cannot fake the eyes. This book explores the evolutionary psychology behind our facial architecture. It reveals why our brains developed a highly sensitive radar to detect the "pan-am smile" of polite deception, and how the facial feedback hypothesis proves that forcing a smile might not actually make you happier. Master the silent language of the face. By understanding the involuntary mechanics of true emotion, you can learn to spot deceptive social masks, read the authentic feelings of those around you, and foster deeper, unfeigned connections.

















