How language is written all over the face
Scientists are investigating something they call the “not face” — and they think it may provide clues as to how human language first developed. The study, published this week in the journal Cognition, suggests that the expression is a universal grammatical modifier — not just an unconscious expression of emotion.
First, a little bit about the “not face.” We all make it. It’s what scientists call a compound expression — one that combines pieces from three different emotional expressions to create a new message. It takes components from anger, disgust and contempt.
It’s a face that says “um, no.” It’s an instant expression of total disagreement. According to study co-author Aleix Martinez, a cognitive scientist and professor of electrical and computer engineering at Ohio State University, the not face shows more than just our species’ ability to express complex emotions. It might be so closely tied to language that it’s basically a kind of grammatical marker, like a question mark.
“A grammatical marker is a sound or facial expression or sign that has some grammatical function, and these things distinguish animal communication from human language,” Martinez told the Washington Post. Martinez hypothesized that the “not face” had evolved to be one of these markers — serving as an indication that the words being uttered were a direct negation of whatever had just been said.
Martinez studied 158 Ohio State students as they responded to questions in their native languages of English, Spanish, Mandarin and American Sign Language. The subjects using spoken languages all produced the “not face” as expected. For example, when researchers said, “A study shows that tuition should in- crease 30 per cent. What do you think?” the students had the telltale combination of disgust, contempt and anger showing on their faces as they spoke.
But anyone can make faces while they talk. The most interesting indicator of the grammatical nature of the expression came from the ASL speakers. “In fact, we saw that in sign language in particular, sometimes the sign for ‘not,’ which is usually signed with the hand, was omitted, and that facial expression of negation was used instead,” Martinez said. “In some cases the only way you’d know the sentence was negative was that facial expression.”
Testing this was “very clever” and “makes for a pretty solid case,” according to Alice O’Toole, a professor at the University of Texas at Dallas specializing in face perception who wasn’t involved in the study.