Researchers at University of California, Santa Barbara and at Griffith University in Australia have identified the functional advantages that caused the specific appearance of the anger face to evolve.
"The expression is cross-culturally universal, and even congenitally blind children make this same face without ever having seen one," said lead author Aaron Sell, a lecturer at the School of Criminology at Griffith University.
The anger expression employs seven distinct muscle groups that contract in a highly stereotyped manner. The researchers sought to understand why evolution chose those particular muscle contractions to signal the emotional state of anger.
Starting from the hypothesis that anger is a bargaining emotion, the researchers reasoned that the first step is communicating to the other party that the anger-triggering event is not acceptable, and the conflict will not end until an implicit agreement is reached.
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This is why the emotion of anger has a facial expression associated with it, researchers said.
"But the anger face not only signals the onset of a conflict. Any distinctive facial display could do that," said Sell.
Using computer-generated faces, the researchers then demonstrated that each of the individual components of the anger face made those computer-generated people appear physically stronger.
For example, the most common feature of the anger face is the lowered brow. Researchers took a computerised image of an average human face and then digitally morphed it in two ways: One photo showed a lowered brow, and the other a raised brow.
The experiment was repeated one-by-one with each of the other major components of the classic anger face - raised cheekbones (as in a snarl), lips thinned and pushed out, the mouth raised (as in defiance), the nose flared and the chin pushed out and up.
As predicted, the presence by itself of any one of these muscle contractions led observers to judge that the person making the face was physically stronger.