Sentences with phrase «seeing angry faces»

It also made them see angry faces as less threatening.
This truism is used in everyday life: Can you see the angry face?

Not exact matches

These fears are not so different from the fear I see in the eyes of protestors carrying signs that depict President Obama as Hitler, the fear I see in the red faces of angry preachers urging their parishioners to «take America back for God,» the fear I detect in some of the books against emerging church, the fear I detect in some of the books in support of the emerging church, the fear I hear in the voices of both gays and the conservative evangelical activists who lobby against them when both sides consider for just a second the possibility that maybe they have it wrong.
They put on brave faces, sometimes even angry faces, so it's understandable that people would think they aren't affected, but we see it.
From there, we see him entering America, but he faces more tribulations, including getting yelled at by angry locals who tell him to «go back home.»
As you see your angry, defiant son suddenly melt into his father and bury his face in his daddy's neck with body - wracking sobs, your own anger melts away.
Instead, when you have some quiet downtime, read picture books together about feelings; look at photos of people and talk about the feelings you see on their faces; brainstorm together about what to do when you're hurt that someone doesn't want to play with you, when you're angry that a friend grabbed your toy, when you're scared in bed after lights out.
It makes me angry when homebirth centers fill the heads of well meaning Moms who only want what's best for their baby, with false surety and then to see the faces of those Moms, disillusioned and in painful shock as they walk into the NICU to see their precious baby because the «Home Birth» went tragically wrong.
«If you have somebody sticking a phone in your face, a mic in your face, over and over, and you don't know how to deal with the situation, you haven't really done that, you haven't dealt with that, I can see where it can... make you a little angry,» Scott said.
The former prime minister was clearly both frustrated and angry that he faced what many saw as trial by media over this affair during his final months and could do nothing to answer back.
«Our study demonstrates that dogs can distinguish angry and happy expressions in humans, they can tell that these two expressions have different meanings, and they can do this not only for people they know well, but even for faces they have never seen before,» says Ludwig Huber, senior author and head of the group at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna's Messerli Research Institute.
She hopes this finding will inspire new therapies for autistic children: «If you have an intervention that jumpstarts this system — if you can get a child to think, «Hey, that's the face I feel when I'm angry» — in the long run you should see improvement.»
Dogs can tell the difference between angry and happy faces even when they only see half the face, according to a new paper in Current Biology.
«Indeed, after viewing an initial same - race angry face, black males were seen as more threatening than white males, even though the faces were pre-tested to be equivalently neutral.»
I was still constantly embarrassed to be seen without any makeup to cover up the angry red bumps on my face and I was frustrated by my acne.
All you see is your partner's angry - looking face — glaring eyes, and tight, thin mouth — and a body that has moved from open to clenched.
The first time we see her face up close, in the midst of a single second she rides the gamut of emotions from workaday desperation, momentary disorientation and, finally, angry gratification.
It's the early»70s and Daniel Ellsberg (Matthew Rhys, «The Americans») is a U.S. military analyst who has grown angry over what he sees as the discrepancy between the grim, deadly reality of a failing Vietnam War effort and the government's public face of inevitable victory.
Angry, facing ruin, the guys see one way out of their predicament: another stint as amateur crooks bent on a big scheme.
There was fear on his face, and he was talking so fast, his words seemed to be leap - frogging one another, falling over one another, tumbling, stumbling, ricocheting, scattering hopelessly: «Got ta get no business here him like down from there, Officer, I never don't know him like saw him before that you know mob up what do they he's so angry there want who'll him attack my boat like that mast alone destroy it cost a fortune you know that's all I need --» The guy was soft — look at him!
In a haunting story that tiptoes between reality and imagination, two people — a lonely, sensitive woman and a damaged, angry boy — face their own histories and discover what they can be to one another, renewed by the strength that comes from a tiny, caring creature they will never see.
In some cases I've seen, the snail is given a rather human face and tends not to have a ferocious or angry countenance at all.
Whenever Plok faces off against the angry creatures spread throughout Akrillic (such as the Bobbins Brothers (seen here), Pekino wizards, or the Womack Spider), the fight is set to this haunting song, sinister cackle and all:
The face of the Angry Sky Gods is not easily seen in miniscule local temperature variations that scarcely register on sensitive instruments.)
However, these previous results also report divergent findings, that range from attentional avoidance (see Hodsoll et al., 2014, who found that boys aged 8 — 16 with clinical levels of conduct problems and high levels of CU showed reduced attentional capture by angry faces) to attentional orientation toward angry faces (see Ezpeleta et al., 2017b, who showed that children with high but non-clinical levels of CU traits and ODD - related problems oriented their attention to angry faces to the same degree as children with low CU traits and low ODD - related problems, during an emotional version of the Go / No - Go task).
Examination of these interactions in predicting the Peak Toward scores for angry faces revealed that, for the moderator effect of anxiety, the slope was significantly different from 0 at low levels of anxiety t (48) = − 3.14, p < 0.05, showing that for children with lower levels of anxiety, CU traits were associated with less attention orientation toward angry faces (see Figure 2).
Therefore, for children with high levels of CU traits, higher levels of ODD - related problems were related to greater attentional avoidance of angry faces (see Figure 1).
On the other hand, for the moderator effects, as seen in CU × anxiety; CU × ODD, CU × anxiety × ODD, we anticipated that high levels of CU traits and high levels of anxiety would be linked to greater attention toward angry and fearful faces, while high levels of CU traits and high levels of ODD - related problems would be associated with less orientation toward these negative emotional faces.
Collectively, these studies show that youth with conduct problems, particularly those with CU traits, have been reported to manifest impairment in expression recognition of fearful and sad faces, while the recognition of angry faces remains intact (see for a recent review Blair et al., 2016).
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