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Acknowledgements; Contributors; Editor's preface;
Part I. The Mechanism of Human Facial Expression or an Electrophysiological Analysis of the Expression of the Emotions: Preface; Section 1. Introduction:
1. A review of previous work on muscle action in facial expression;
2. Principle facts that emerge from my electrophysiological experiments;
3. The reliability of these experiments;
4. The purpose of my research; Section 2. Scientific Section: Foreword;
5. Anatomical preparations, and portraits of the subjects who underwent electrophysiological experiments;
6. The muscle of attention (m. frontalis);
7. The muscle of reflection (superior part of m. orbicularis oculi, that part of the muscle called the sphincter of the eyelids);
8. The muscle of aggression (m. procerus);
9. The muscle of pain (m. corrugator supercilii);
10. The muscles of joy and benevolence (m. zygomaticus major and the inferior part of m. orbicularis oculi);
11. The muscle of lasciviousness (transverse part of m. nasalis);
12. The muscle of sadness (m. depressor anguli oris);
13. The muscles of weeping and whimpering (m. zygomaticus minor and m. levator labii superioris);
14. Muscles complementary to surprise (muscles that lower the mandible);
15. The muscle of fright, of terror (m. platysma);
16. A critical study of several antiquities from the point of view of m. corrugator supercilii and m. frontalis; Section 3. Aesthetic Section: Foreword;
17. Aesthetic electrophysiological studies on the mechanism of human facial expression;
18. Further aesthetic electrophysiological studies;
19. Synoptic table on the plates of the Album;
Part II. Commentary Chapters:
20. The highly original Dr Duchenne R. Andrew Cuthbertson;
21. The Duchenne de Boulogne collection in the department of morphology, L'Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux Arts Jean-François Debord;
22. Duchenne today: facial expression and facial surgery John T. Hueston;
23. Duchenne and facial expression of emotion Paul Ekman; Index.
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Add The Mechanism of Human Facial Expression, In Mecanisme de la Physionomie Humaine, the great nineteenth-century French neurologist Duchenne de Boulogne combined his intimate knowledge of facial anatomy with his skill in photography and expertise in using electricity to stimulate individual facial , The Mechanism of Human Facial Expression to your collection on WonderClub |