Signals from Within

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Signale aus dem Innenleben
Author: Tanja Krämer

We snort with anger or beam with happiness. Emotions determine our lives and influence our behavior. Emotional signals are therefore also a means of communication.

Scientific support: Prof. Dr. Dirk Wildgruber

Published: 18.12.2025

Difficulty: intermediate

In short
  • People are very good at recognizing the emotions of others based on facial expressions and tone of voice.
  • Basic emotions such as anger, sadness, or joy trigger similar facial expressions in all people.
  • The emotions of others provide important social cues. For example, a sad face indicates a need for help, while a fearful expression warns of danger.
  • The areas of the brain involved in recognizing emotions are also responsible for generating emotions.
Why do we cry?

We cry with rage or are moved to tears. But what is the purpose of emotional tears? Scientists believe that crying serves as an unmistakable signal to show our fellow human beings that we are unhappy or helpless – and may need support.

In fact, researchers have shown that test subjects are less able to recognize the emotional state of people in photos when their tears have been “retouched” away. When women cry out of grief, they also send invisible chemical signals. According to a study by Israeli scientists, the imperceptible smell of tears of grief causes testosterone levels in men to drop and also reduces sexual arousal.

The cliché that women are more emotional than men has also been scientifically confirmed. They cry up to 64 times a year, while men cry a maximum of 17 times in the same period. However, the difference only develops in adolescence: women not only cry more often, but also longer and for different reasons than men, for example when faced with conflict. Researchers therefore suspect that the type and frequency of crying in adults could also be culturally determined.

Many philosophers have defined humans by their capacity for reason. Aristotle (384–322 BC) spoke of the zoon logicon, the rational animal. However, brain researchers and cognitive psychologists today take a different view from the great Greek thinker: the power that significantly determines us is not reason; it is emotions.

We are under their influence around the clock, day in and day out. Permanently generated by the brain as reactions to the constant stream of information, emotions guide our thoughts and actions. Since only a small part of them is experienced as conscious feelings, we often do not recognize what is driving us at any given moment. And often others recognize our current emotional state better than we do ourselves. Because emotions play such a fundamental role in people's lives, humans have developed a very fine sense of what others are feeling and how they feel about it.

Expressive facial expressions

Emotions are clearly visible on the face. Whether someone frowns or twists the corners of their mouth, those around them can usually recognize exactly what emotions lie behind the facial expression. And this is true around the globe: the so-called basic emotions such as fear, sadness, anger, disgust, surprise, or joy are expressed in facial features that are more or less the same in all cultures and among all people around the world. When we are surprised, for example, our eyes widen and our mouth opens slightly. When we feel joy, the corners of our mouth turn upward and so-called laugh lines form around our eyes. ▸ The Roots of Emotions

These facial expressions, which are characteristic of basic emotions, are intuitively understood all over the world. Incidentally, this also applies to tone of voice: whether someone is angry or in a good mood, whether they are threatening or trying to charm us, we can recognize this even in foreign languages – simply by the tone of voice.

What's more, facial expressions and voice can only be influenced to a limited extent by willpower and are therefore difficult to disguise. But why do our emotions come across so clearly and are so easy to read? Because the obvious expression of emotions has important social functions for people living together in groups. For example, a sad or even crying face tells others that you are feeling bad and may need comfort and support (see box “Why do we cry?”).

An angry face warns of possible imminent aggression and urges others to stay out of the way. And anyone who sees an obviously fearful person is on their guard themselves because this indicates an imminent danger.

Emotion recognition in the brain

Recognizing the emotions of others happens automatically and at lightning speed. We pay particular attention to the mouth and eyes of the person we are looking at – two areas that are most expressive in facial expressions. When processing this visual information, areas of the brain are active that also play a role in the emergence of emotions. These include parts of the cerebral cortex, the limbic system with the amygdala, and the anterior cingulate cortex, where the so-called spindle cells are particularly active in emotion recognition.

But we don't just read other people's feelings, we also feel them. Mirror neurons in the motor cortex, for example, fire not only when we smile ourselves, but also when we see others smiling. This may be the reason why many emotions are contagious and transfer to others.

A difficult field of research

However, emotions are not an easy area to study in neurobiological research. Because feelings are so fleeting and subjective, they are difficult to measure and evaluate. For this reason, many studies make a strict distinction between emotional experience, which test subjects can only describe through self-assessment, and the expression of emotions, which can also be seen and evaluated by observers. Animal studies are also problematic in the field of affective neuroscience, as animals are known to be unable to provide information about their feelings.

However, some insights have been gained from patients with brain lesions, such as those with deficits in emotion recognition. For example, if the amygdala is damaged, those affected are less able to recognize fear in others. Damage to the insula leads to limitations in recognizing anger. But even people without such defined brain damage sometimes have problems interpreting the feelings of others. Autistic people, for example, have difficulty assigning emotions to faces. Such symptoms also occur in schizophrenia, dementia, or stroke. The result is sometimes serious limitations in social interaction. This makes it clear how much the ability to recognize and empathize with the feelings of our fellow human beings influences our daily interactions with one another.

First published on July 20, 2011
Last updated on December 18, 2025

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