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Botox May Affect Ability to Feel Emotions

g0nzalez0

Smash Rookie
Joined
Mar 10, 2009
Messages
3
Botox injections may do more than smooth your wrinkles and limit your facial expressions. These popular injections may also dampen your ability to feel emotions. The study findings appear in the journal Emotions.

Botox injections were the No. 1 nonsurgical cosmetic procedure performed in 2009, according to statistics by the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery.

“For at least some emotions, if you take away some part of the facial expression, you take away some of the emotional experience,” says study researcher Joshua Ian Davis, PhD, a term assistant professor in the department of psychology at Barnard College in New York City.

“Whether this is a benefit or a detriment depends on your goals,” he says.
Botox Dampens Emotions

Botox injections smooth wrinkles by paralyzing the underlying muscles that cause the wrinkles. In the new study, participants who received Botox injections self-reported less emotional response to some emotional video clips, and as a result, did not feel their emotions quite as deeply as their counterparts who received treatment with a wrinkle filler called Restylane, which does not paralyze muscles. Instead, Restylane restores volume to facial folds and wrinkles.

This dampened emotional reaction was only related to mildly emotional clips, suggesting that the strength of the emotional impulse may make a difference.

That said, those who received Botox reacted to the same to video clips after their injection as they as they did before they received the injections.

The new research set out to prove the facial feedback hypothesis. This hypothesis suggests that our facial expressions can affect our emotional experience. There seems to be some merit to the hypothesis when the effects of Botox were compared with the effects of Restylane.
 

CRASHiC

Smash Hero
Joined
Oct 27, 2008
Messages
7,267
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Haiti Gonna Hait
I don't know, I get my anus injected everynight, and I feel all kinds of emotion.

EDIT- Ooooh, Botox, not Buttox
whopsie lul
 

Zakosai

Smash Apprentice
Joined
Oct 12, 2005
Messages
129
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Vicenza, Italy
This is certainly difficult to measure in people.

How would a toned down expression alter someones feelings? Maybe we know our face so well that when it doesn't react as strongly to an event then neither do we.

The only fact we can readily assume is that others perceive us as being less emotional due to outward appearances. As for our inner self, this may be true for some people.

Then again, some people like to emote less than others to show temperance. This would be to their benefit.
 

StinkomanFan

Smash Lord
Joined
Jan 16, 2009
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1,455
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Fennimore, Wisconsin
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It took scientists this long to figure that out? You can tell them their puppy got hit by a bulldozer hauling manure and they won't react at all.
 

GoldShadow

Marsilea quadrifolia
BRoomer
Joined
Jun 6, 2003
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14,463
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Location: Location
No, I don't think you get it. Everybody knows that it affects your ability to move facial muscles and make facial expressions.

What this study says is that these people actually feel less emotion too, on the inside. That when people are less able to make facial expressions, their actual emotions are also affected. That they don't just show less emotion, but feel less too. It's probably a subconscious psychological effect of some sort.
 

Uncle Meat

Smash Champion
Joined
Oct 27, 2005
Messages
2,737
Psychologists working in the field of facial expression have come to a pretty solid conclusion that your facial expression can actually effect your emotions. It's not wholly one way.

Interestingly the first clues to this actually came from psychologists mapping out different muscle movements in the face and matching them to emotions. They started noticing that the days they did unhappy expressions they were coming out of the sessions feeling depressed. Very weird ****.
 

MikeKirby

OTL Winrar
Joined
Jun 6, 2006
Messages
2,175
Location
Brooklyn, New York
Psychologists working in the field of facial expression have come to a pretty solid conclusion that your facial expression can actually effect your emotions. It's not wholly one way.

Interestingly the first clues to this actually came from psychologists mapping out different muscle movements in the face and matching them to emotions. They started noticing that the days they did unhappy expressions they were coming out of the sessions feeling depressed. Very weird ****.
Hmmm... so what you're saying is if I try to keep a smile throughout the day, I'll be happier and more content? Interesting...
 

Uncle Meat

Smash Champion
Joined
Oct 27, 2005
Messages
2,737
That is indeed what I am saying. I started doing it and I can't put it all down to that but I think it has done a bit for me. Sometimes the smiling just feels forced though and it doesn't work. A good smile can't hurt though. People respond better to you if they think you're a happy person.
 
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