Donald Trump threatens to shut US-Mexico border, again

Donald Trump threatens to shut US-Mexico border, again

President Donald Trump on Thursday again threatened to seal the US-Mexican border, claiming in a tweet that America's southern neighbour is allowing illegal immigrants to cross unhindered. "May close the Southern Border!" the president wrote. "Mexico is doing NOTHING...

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NDA will win over 300 seats says PM Modi

NDA will win over 300 seats says PM Modi

Confident over BJP’s electoral prospects in 2019 Lok Sabha elections, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday said the NDA will form the government with over 300 seats. “My political experience says that there will be a lot of increase as compared to the past....

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Nirav Modi to seek bail again at UK court hearing today

Nirav Modi to seek bail again at UK court hearing today

Fugitive diamantaire Nirav Modi is set to appear before Westminster Magistrates Court in London on Friday, when his legal team will make a second bail application. The 48-year-old diamond merchant was denied bail by District Judge Marie Mallon at his first hearing...

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Humans can read each other’s emotions from tiny changes in facial colour: Study

Humans can read each other’s emotions from surprisingly tiny changes in facial colour, according to a study.

Researchers at The Ohio State University in the US found that people are able to identify other people’s feelings up to 75 per cent of the time – based solely on subtle shifts in blood flow colour around the nose, eyebrows, cheeks or chin.

The study, published in the journal PNAS, demonstrates a never-before-documented connection between the central nervous system and emotional expression in the face.

It also enabled researchers to construct computer algorithms that correctly recognise human emotion via face colour up to 90 per cent of the time.

“We identified patterns of facial colouring that are unique to every emotion we studied,” said Aleix Martinez, a professor at The Ohio State University.

“We believe these colour patterns are due to subtle changes in blood flow or blood composition triggered by the central nervous system.

“Not only do we perceive these changes in facial colour, but we use them to correctly identify how other people are feeling, whether we do it consciously or not,” said Martinez.

The researchers hope they will enable future forms of artificial intelligence to recognise and emulate human emotions.

They first took hundreds of pictures of facial expressions and separated the images into different colour channels that correspond to how human eyes see colour – a red-green channel and a blue-yellow channel.

Using computer analysis, they found that emotions like “happy” or “sad” formed unique colour patterns.

Regardless of gender, ethnicity or overall skin tone, everybody displayed similar patterns when expressing the same emotion, the researchers said.

To test whether colours alone could convey emotions – without smiles or frowns to go along with them – they superimposed the different emotional colour patterns on pictures of faces with neutral expressions.

They showed the neutral faces to 20 study participants and asked them to guess how the person in the picture was feeling, choosing from a list of 18 emotions.

The emotions included basic ones like “happy” and “sad” as well as more complex ones such as “sadly angry” or “happily surprised,” researchers said.

Facial colour can broadcast our feelings: Study

Humans can read each other’s emotions from surprisingly tiny changes in facial colour, according to a study.

Researchers at The Ohio State University in the US found that people are able to identify other people’s feelings up to 75 percent of the time – based solely on subtle shifts in blood flow colour around the nose, eyebrows, cheeks or chin.

The study, published in the journal PNAS, demonstrates a never-before-documented connection between the central nervous system and emotional expression in the face.

It also enabled researchers to construct computer algorithms that correctly recognise human emotion via face colour up to 90 percent of the time.

“We identified patterns of facial colouring that are unique to every emotion we studied,” said Aleix Martinez, a professor at The Ohio State University.

“We believe these colour patterns are due to subtle changes in blood flow or blood composition triggered by the central nervous system.

“Not only do we perceive these changes in facial colour, but we use them to correctly identify how other people are feeling, whether we do it consciously or not,” said Martinez.

The researchers hope they will enable future forms of artificial intelligence to recognise and emulate human emotions.

They first took hundreds of pictures of facial expressions and separated the images into different colour channels that correspond to how human eyes see colour – a red-green channel and a blue-yellow channel.

Using computer analysis, they found that emotions like “happy” or “sad” formed unique colour patterns.

Regardless of gender, ethnicity or overall skin tone, everybody displayed similar patterns when expressing the same emotion, the researchers said.

To test whether colours alone could convey emotions – without smiles or frowns to go along with them – they superimposed the different emotional colour patterns on pictures of faces with neutral expressions.

They showed the neutral faces to 20 study participants and asked them to guess how the person in the picture was feeling, choosing from a list of 18 emotions.

The emotions included basic ones like “happy” and “sad” as well as more complex ones such as “sadly angry” or “happily surprised,” researchers said.

The real reason why GIFs are no longer available on Snapchat, Instagram

Snapchat and Instagram added Giphy integration only recently. Instagram introduced the feature in January while Snapchat followed the suit in February. One offensive GIF forced two major social networking platforms, Snapchat and Instagram, to remove Giphy integration from their respective platforms. The move seems to be temporary, but affects millions…