for many of us people-watching is endlessly fascinating even when we can't hear or don't understand what's being said we can often get the gist of it by simply looking our bodies are constantly communicating we don't need a powerpoint presentation we don't need a stage we don't need a projector or a screen we can display what we really feel at any moment at any time anywhere we are present [Music] body language is an innate part of what it means to be alive and it turns out that actions do speak louder than words why else would we talk with our hands when the person we're speaking to can't even see us what we know is that some emotions are tied very closely to certain body expressions and that that works in both directions because it's hardwired [Music] the body doesn't lie you can't fool people unless you're a phenomenal actor and they're very few of them i did not have sexual relations with that woman miss lewinsky most people are no better than flipping a coin in judging deception it's not faces it's not by itself it's not gestures by itself it's not a certain word by itself it's not scratching my nose or covering my mouth or being fidgety understanding non-verbal communication has become a valuable tool in the justice system an essential skill for security teams a high-tech commodity in the world of marketing and even a potential treatment for post-traumatic stress more than ever it's important to know what is our body language really saying this is a place where stories are told not just with words but with images one of the essential skills here is an intimate knowledge of the human face how it's constructed how it works and most importantly how it moves what i'm doing is i'm bringing life to something that has no life and one of the easiest ways to do that is to bring facial expressions and emotions into the face as you can see i'm moving the forehead here so when you you're angry it furrows very quickly and it can go up and you're surprised it raises so there are 43 different muscles in the face and with those muscles you can make 10 thousand plus expressions so everybody knows a smile is a smile and a frown is a frown um which makes it easier to buy but it's also you gotta get it right or something seems off just by reading my face you can tell if i'm happy or angry or disgusted these facial expressions are hardwired to our brains and common to every human being on the planet why is that the answer goes back to the very beginnings of [Music] humankind put yourself in the position of a human a hundred thousand years ago we'd be out there in the wild worrying about who who's gonna come and attack us there were just nonverbal behaviors [Music] the reason why we had these things in our evolutionary history is because they had value to us in terms of our survival if we were walking around 100 000 years ago and all of a sudden i see some something that i think is a threat and i went like this and you saw me do that you probably would not start charging over there and so you're getting signal value from what i'm doing without even talking about it without even expressing the words and this is immediate and automatic our faces communicate fear involuntarily take this couple out for a drive in the country they struck a moose both of them live to tell the tale but the look of fear etched on the woman's face would be recognized anywhere on the planet her body is reacting this way for specific reasons what that's doing for me is that it allows me to expand my chest i can take in oxygen because i'm my body's preparing to fight or flee my eyes get a little larger so i can increase my visual uh my visual fields so i can see more things as opposed to when i'm angry you bring your brows down and you start doing this so you're narrowing and restricting the visual field so that i am starting to target nonverbal behaviors all emerged in our evolutionary history to help us communicate with each other about these very basic needs and motives related to survival so for example if we were walking around here a hundred thousand years ago and i happened to pick up something that i thought maybe we would want to have for dinner and i picked that thing up and i put that in my mouth and i just went ah like this and i gave it to you you probably wouldn't need it well what's really interesting about facial expressions of emotion is that the specific muscle configurations on our faces occur for a specific reason the research has shown that wrinkling your nose actually cuts off some of the nasal passages it helps me not ingest all of this stuff together into my body and so there's a function to that for me when i was 23 i was approached by the fbi to become a special agent uh how they found me i i don't know joe navarro spent 25 years as an fbi agent his specialty was reading body language and by the time he retired he'd earned the nickname the spy catcher i was involved in a program called the behavioral analysis program and we looked at human behavior so that we could understand it so that we could interpret it so we could decode it and use it in our investigations navarro's success at catching criminals is rooted in looking at things that most of us wouldn't think of one of the things that i noticed immediately was how accurate the feet were and that the feet were actually more accurate often than the face because by social convention you're walking down the street somebody smiles and you smile back but your feet have no such association with social convention you know the right foot or the left foot will it will automatically orient towards where the person wants to go so we'll make facial contact but our feet are not dedicated to that at all we have a very ancient part of the brain the reptilian brain this has to deal with breathing eating basic survival things on top of that we have this exquisite system called the limbic system it evolved to react and to keep us safe and if it sees a threat and it doesn't matter whether it's a lion or a tiger or words it says stop our limbic system is a bit like software running in the background and whether we like it or not it affects the way we move our bodies we certainly saw this with prince charles and princess dye they would literally eventually deny each other in a way the easiest way to teach this is to is to say a belly away don't want you to stay when your limbic system is regulating all of this it's in the moment the whole body is transmitting this is a part of our primate past [Music] our ancestors were really good at reading people because if they didn't know who was friend or who was foe they would be dead it's as simple as that [Music] dr lillian glass is taking a stroll on the santa monica pier she's a body language and communications expert here to do some people watching the body doesn't lie [Music] you can't fool people unless you're a phenomenal actor body language can tell you so much [Music] she absolutely adores him and you know he's not really giving her much communication he's very much aloof and you can see she's really cornered him literally she'd like a lot more than he's giving and she's pulling on his shirt she really wants to get attention they've disconnected she's gone over to the side her head is down and it's not happening and she's she's resigned herself to just look at the ocean there's not a lot of bonding there there's not touching there's not communication so there's some tension in that relationship when i look at people i look at the whole person i don't just look at one thing one of the things i look for is how close do the couple stand to one another also how are their toes pointed if your toes are pointed in the direction of your partner chances are that you're in good shape they absolutely adore one another it's such a kind of a beautiful dance to watch this couple they're really connected they're absolutely in sync he kisses her forehead with such love and affection and tenderness they look right into each other's eyes very very enamored with him and vice versa [Music] how long have you two been together a year a year and has it always been this beautiful and like a dance yes how did you two meet uh in a company a company you worked together yes and you just fell in love i got interested in body language because i started out as a speech pathologist and i was working with people from all walks of life because they thought i looked too feminine something from the bar isn't that amazing please could you give me a double vodka right away the first person i worked with was dustin hoffman for the lady oh how about a uh dubinae with a twist yes ma'am i was the one that taught him how to sound like a woman for tootsie you're not gonna get away with this i got away with it look around and then it kind of grew and started doing a lot of media and wrote 18 books on communication and body language and dealing with toxic people and here i am what i'm doing is very systematic but you may do it automatically how many times have you said i don't like that person or you turn on the television they're lying i can't stand them i would build a great wall and nobody builds walls better than me believe me donald trump whether you love him or you hate him the bottom line is he is a great communicator are you running are you not running his body lying he doesn't care he makes facial expressions but he's real what is our country coming to and that's what's coming across there's not phoniness that we've seen so much in our politicians where they're gesturing like this trump gestures like this i will be the greatest jobs president that god ever created i trust my guts i trust my instincts and that emotion tells you uh-uh that's not right ah he's full of it oh he's telling the truth so that emotion tells you and that's called your gut level communication [Music] while our instincts help us interpret other people's body language what we do with our own bodies can often happen for reasons beyond our control once you have a thought before it gets to the voice box it has to go through the area of the brain that controls my hands and this is neurologically true for everybody once i'm going to verbalize a thought it makes me move my hands so doing this is not just a communicative value it's not just having signal value to you who's who are watching this it's helping me think the fact of the matter is our gestures are not just communicative because when you're on the phone and i'm on the phone we're also gesturing even though we know that the person can't see us that's the way we are created the body just expresses or embodies what's going on in our minds so how can we decode the body language of other people in a more systemic way the most obvious place to begin is the face the body doesn't lie and neither does the face because the face is connected with a lot of facial nerves and 12 cranial nerves and when you have an emotion these nerves fire and muscles start moving your asaurus muscle you either smile or you're frowning the masseter muscles if you're angry something happens here in your jaw but once it's triggered something in my mind says okay i'm emotional our brains tell us to fire a package of components one set of components has to do with our physiology one set of components has to do with our cognitions and one set of components has to do with our expressive behavior in our hands and our face and all that so that one that goes along that one facial nerve that that lights up our faces [Music] in the past 40 years all of the movements our face muscles can make have been meticulously studied analyzed and codified it's a system known as facts well fax is the acronym for the facial action coding system it breaks down every functional anatomical movement that the face can can make and it codifies each muscle movement by a certain number so whenever a person is moving their face for whatever reason a trained observer can learn how to identify which muscle is creating that appearance change let's say i there's an expression of fear that occurs i could break down this prototypic expression of fear as in facts cause it would be a 1 a 2 a 4 5 7 20 with 26. researchers have identified seven universally recognized facial expressions there's joy surprise contempt sadness anger disgust and finally fear professor matsumoto has a black belt in judo his passion for the sport took him to the 2004 olympic games in athens there he conducted an experiment photographing the faces of the judo competitors so here are some examples of images that we selected for analysis we then code the muscle movements in the face using the facial action coding system we know of course when the person has one there's a very large expression of joy that happiness the happiness expression has the muscle around the eye that's innervated it puffs out the cheeks it gives a little shine it's exactly the same muscles that are innervated right here the prototypic expression of joy so we did the same kind of study with the paralympic games that happened in athens two weeks after the sighted olympics the blind athletes did exactly the same kinds of facial expressions that the sighted athletes did now why is this important it's important because most of these blind athletes were blind from birth there's no way they could possibly have learned to produce these expressions by seeing anybody else that means that the only rational explanation is that we are all born with the ability to produce these expressions it's an innate ability of ours so here we are at hotel lobby it's a great place to uh people watch here we have uh three women and and we notice you know how often they they either touch each other or signal to each other and this just tells us they've known each other for a while now one of the ways that we can tell when people are are standing and talking is how relaxed they are and we notice that the woman just crossed her leg one in front of the other and this is a high comfort display we only do that when we're comfortable uh around other people we know that this family gets along really well we know this just from the amount of tactile activity we're observing that there's a lot of touching between the the father and uh and the son and this is always a good indicator of a positive relationship so we see the the young lady fixing the other girl's hair and we think of it as this is merely for aesthetic purposes that's only part of it by grooming other people it stimulates the hair follicles and it sends signals to the brain that add to a psychological comfort [Music] instinctively we can usually tell if people are comfortable with each other but the fact is that many of us will sometimes try to disguise the emotion we are experiencing we do it when we're trying to be polite or we could be trying to deceive someone detecting deception is where an investigator's expertise comes in handy there is no pinocchio effect there's not one single behavior indicative of deception the paradigm that i like to use is comfort and discomfort that humans are very binary we are either crying as a baby or were quite quite satisfied people are either very comfortable or they're struggling with something if you're not an expert on body language it's a good place to at least begin you will see everything from lip biting squinting lip compression furrowing of the forehead displacement of the jaw they might go we might do a cleansing behavior where we wipe our hands on our on our legs if we're really stressed you often see people pull their socks up and they're literally ventilating their skin down by the feet they may actually dimple their cheeks they put pressure on on themselves or they may wring their hands they literally wring their hands the person may run his fingers through his hair or women do it back here even a light touching of the neck is suggestive that something's wrong we humans do that a lot um there may be covering of the suprasternal notch we go oh my god that happened so we look at all these behaviors and say okay i asked a question and this is their reaction now the question is why why are they behaving like this discomfort can also trigger our face muscles to move in ways that are difficult to spot and even harder to control they're known as micro expressions micro expressions are quick extremely quick fleeting facial expressions of emotion they happen when you're emotional but you're in a situation where you're trying to control your expressions if you can imagine there's a neural tug of war that's fighting for control over your face the concept of micro expressions started with darwin in the book the expression of emotion in man and animals basically darwin stated that sometimes we are so overwhelmed with emotion that despite our best attempts to control them they leak out let's say for example somebody walks in the room and you can't stand them but you're going to smile at them anyway because it's your boss so you go hi you automatically have that snarl but you don't see that snarl it happens really fast so the micro expressions are the leakage that's occurring because of this neural tug of war in situations where i'm emotional i'm emotional but i'm trying to hide it miami international airport is one of the busiest in the united states every year some 45 million passengers come and go travelers and their luggage are screened in a variety of ways but an airport is a place where you can be sure your body language is being watched today the woman in charge of airport public safety and security is walking the terminal first of all we have to know what are our threats and then what are the behaviors associated with those threats these are your bags excuse me bags over here back up just kind of stay with me those are yours the behavior of an individual dropping a bag and walking away from it should raise a red flag behavior is more than just how a person acts it's about their facial expressions their body language and it's something that we have to intuitively be able to evaluate in a split second here we actively scan the public looking for something that is just not right how they're dressed how they're acting are they engaged are they disengaged are they zoned out are they wanting to avoid any kind of contact with other people are they trying not to be noticed ten years ago stover had a radical idea what if everyone who worked at the airport no matter what job they did was trained in behavior detection as long as we hire from the human race there will always be threats to deal with and i knew that i had 40 000 troops working here at this airport that i could use to help me with security and so now all the airport employees check-in staff mechanics baggage handlers everyone gets training in behavior detection starting with the janitorial staff a lot of behavior detection is intuitive and we're just using the basic intuition in all of us to just kind of tweak it refine it and give the employees that tool to be able to use it as they assist the passengers you know we have a brown uniform you may have a blue uniform the fact is that our mission is very similar in sessions like this one miami airport workers receive basic training in behavior recognition you guys are most important assets in the war against not only terrorism but criminal activity the airport workers are instructed to observe people in the terminal to look out for anything outside the range of normal behavior is anyone loitering is anyone making hand signals do passengers look especially nervous as you know we have to get it right every day because the terrorists only need one shot miami international also uses more conventional methods there's thousands of cameras here at miami international airport that's the marriage between behavior detection and technology what's interesting is their clothing and choice of clothing somebody's going to go to the bahamas they're not going to be wearing bulky clothing we can look for a person's hands their hand movement is very important we have to try to keep an eye on everybody's hands we don't have the large canine teeth that other predators have and so we focus on the hands we look for the hands to say are they welcoming or are they aggressive the two suicide bombers in brussels with the glove on their hands that should have stood out as an anomaly [Applause] [Music] airports typically try to stop passengers from taking dangerous items onto airplanes the focus here is different to stop potentially dangerous people from getting onto planes it's not as much about technology as it is about social psychology developing and sharing the ability to read people when i started in law enforcement it was mostly anecdotal information if you touch your nose you're lying if you touch your mouth you're lying well you know that's just sheer nonsense most people are no better than flipping a coin in judging deception when people are doing the shifty eyes thing whether their eyes up into the left or down into the right or whatever that is they're lying that's a big myth here at the university of british columbia there's a small research group focused on deception and body language through evolution it appears that there's been an arms race between reading other people and other people controlling what they want us to see that's the first time you told a lie all day the research is led by forensic psychologist dr stephen porter his team studies the way people interact and the different ways we try to deceive each other liars or insincere individuals are expected to fidget a lot uh they're expected to look very nervous maybe shift around in their seat and scientifically the real tells are the opposite of that i want you to listen to me i'm going to say this again so if you watch bill clinton for example in his denial of having sex with miss lewinsky he's burning holes through people in the audience he's picking particular individuals and he's just staring them down i did not have sexual relations with that woman if we look at his nonverbal behavior as well as his verbal behavior during that claim he comes across as extremely convincing as extremely sincere i never told anybody to lie whether he's a trained liar we don't know but he certainly he's certainly a very skilled liar not a single time never he conveys anger and hostility at the idea that anybody was thinking he was even lying these allegations are false he's using this thing we call an illustrator very very effectively and i need to go back to work for the american people it's an intimidation tactic it's a power and control thing and it's an attention grabber human beings lie to one another on average one to two times per day if you have a pair of human strangers who interact within 10 minutes they're lying to each other on average three times and so we see deception you know in everyday life little white lies all the way up to where high stakes lies but it's a really fundamental aspect of social interaction so our research group decided to undertake the largest scale study of high stakes deception ever conducted and that entailed collecting videos from all over the world of people pleading for the return of a missing relative so in 2008 carissa boudreau in nova scotia went missing and her mother penny boudreau gave an impassioned plea to the public to try to assist in finding her missing daughter so please determine if the individual in the following video is being on the boudreau video is used to teach some fundamentals about body language i'll leave the room throughout your discussion and please let me know when you're finished and i will return and hear your verdict your grandparents are looking for you all of us are i don't know where you are but just come home or call or something please all your friends are looking for you [Music] we're all worried we just want you home safe thank you for coming today she looked distressed clearly yeah she was crying a lot were they real tears of course they were they were there she was wiping them yeah yeah you got a point there she was wiping him right off her voice was cracking yeah very true it was really exhausted i don't think he would go on national tv if you were lying like i just don't think he would i don't know where you are but just come up over a call or something so the interesting thing about the penny boudreau video is that she shows a classic sign of emotional deception she is attempting to appear distressed because her daughter is missing but she's not showing an engagement of the distressed muscles which are the corrugators in between the eyes which generally when somebody's distressed they go together and up the deceptive pleaders generally are unable to engage those muscles and they end up looking more like a deer in the headlights they look surprised i took her for a drive that day just to try to have a heart-to-heart with her in a place like in a car she can't get away and slam her door which she usually does to me in this frame and a couple of frames after it penny displays hostility both in her facial expression and in the words she uses and her tone of voice indicating that she's still very upset angry with carissa for one reason or another she doesn't want the world to know that she's feeling that but it's coming out involuntarily can i ask you what this has been like as a mother penny responds to the question from the interviewer with a flash of anger and hostility she knows that her daughter is dead the interviewer is asking questions that are getting a little too close to home porter shared his team's insights with police investigators the police then switched the focus of their investigation to penny boudreau herself [Music] eventually they got information that she had in fact murdered her daughter because her boyfriend the suspect had mentioned one day he didn't think he was ready to be a father [Music] one thing that i've learned that that really surprised me was the extent the magnitude of information that we're conveying any moment via our body language our facial expressions and what we're saying even psychopathic liars who are you know some of the best around us aren't able to control quote-unquote leakage via at least one of these different communication channels it's not just the human face that can reveal inner thoughts you can tell a lot about a person from the way they walk imagine we are in the savannah in africa as early man was and they're looking on the horizon and they see people walking what's their gate because that's really what they can see are they walking towards us away from us are they walking aggressively the way we walk can say a lot it can reveal our intentions our state of mind and our physical health at queen's university in canada they are studying biological motion the research is led by dr nicholas trojan he's interested in how the human brain instinctively interprets the way people move people spend a lot of time watching other people and we've become experts in it when we talk about body language it's a signal which is in a way much more honest than facial expression because it's much harder to fake and it's much harder to control the humans apparently are very very efficient in decoding the information which is contained in the way humans move if you feel something is odd or if you feel uncomfortable with someone who is moving a system kicks in that knows if something is not quite right what i'm showing you here is 15 dots on the screen and you might be able to make out a human behind those dots but that changes dramatically if i set it into motion so if this one moves you can't help but seeing a person here you see more than just a person you can determine whether or you can at least make a good guess whether this here is a male so you see here this lateral body sway and you see the shape of the male changing a little bit with wider shoulders and narrower hips on the other hand you see there's clearly a woman here with a very different movement so more vertical movement here less lateral body's way more moving in the hips here you can see more than the than the agenda of the walker i can make it more um relaxed here we can make the woman a little more happy here you see that vertical bounciness and the swing and the in in the motion here i've always been fascinated by how much information apparently there is in the way people appear and what fascinates me most is really the sophistication of the information that we can retrieve from it the human visual system does it without thinking we just do it so obviously the way we feel affects the way we pose our body and also the way we move but interestingly the way we move can also have effects on the way we feel so we're really fascinated with body language and we're particularly interested in other people's body language you know we're interested this is one of the most watched ted talks of all time with more than 36 million online views the speaker is american social psychologist amy cuddy to us and what the outcomes are we tend to forget though the other audience that's influenced by our non-verbals and that's ourselves cuddy is on the teaching staff at the harvard business school she's renowned for her work on so-called power poses the idea that we can actually make ourselves feel more powerful simply by the way we carry ourselves your body and your mind are constantly in conversation with each other and your body is largely driving that conversation why not take control of that why not have your body tell your mind that you're safe and powerful rather than having your body tell your mind you're not safe you're not powerful so if you take non-human primates i mean you see them expand their chests pound their chests they do things to make themselves appear bigger than the other individuals in their hierarchy you see this kind of body language across the animal kingdom and similarly when animals feel powerless they do exactly the opposite they make themselves tiny humans are animals as well and we do the same kinds of things some of the most expressive examples of body language happen in the world of dance in the classical ballets the female lead character is usually either dead or half dead she's fragile and frail and by the end she's all you know withered up on the floor like the dying swan in more contemporary ballet you see a lot more expansiveness in the female lead characters so think of alvin ailey dance theater where so many of the ballets are about liberation and freedom and power i think it's a really dangerous message that we send to our daughters that femininity is tied to being fragile and frail and and you know wrapping oneself up [Applause] the haka is a really powerful dance that's performed by the new zealand national rugby team called the all blacks they'll be facing the other team and going through this series of really powerful postures it's kind of beautiful and intimidating at the same time the important thing to understand about the hakka is that it's really not primarily about intimidating the other side it is primarily about preparing themselves for a challenging situation do we have those displays in other cultures what we do in a sense when a president or a head of state arrives and they review the troops that is a stationary hakka the troops are usually very tall very resplendent in their uniform and we look at them and we inspect them and we say okay you guys look pretty tough at essence they are really displays of who we are what we are and what we can do and what's fascinating is it's all nonverbal 31st international between new zealand all of us display nonverbal communication in our daily lives and our bodies often reveal to others how we feel when we walk and we're sad we walk in this slouched way and when we walk in we're happy we're walking in a more erect posture and we're you know swinging our arms more and you know our stride is longer so getting people to walk in a happy way makes them feel happier even if they have no idea what they're doing this is a really new area of research that some people call embodiment and i don't think we know exactly what the mechanism is i think what we know is that some emotions are tied very closely to certain body expressions and that that works in both directions because it's hardwired i think some of the most promising applications of this work and we're just at the beginning of this now but are in the area of treating people with things like post-traumatic stress post-traumatic stress is the most extreme form of powerlessness people feel that their bodies in some way betrayed them by not getting them out of an unsafe situation they really carry trauma in their bodies heads up they're shooting the law combat veterans with post-traumatic stress in particular are maybe less likely to want to talk about their situation and so these body-based therapies are proving to be really effective teaching people to sit upright and open their chest and breathe more deeply is in fact calming the nervous system it is communicating with through the vagus nerve um with the mind right it's telling the vagus nerve that you're not in a fight or flight situation you're in a rest and digest situation that you are safe i'm really hopeful that we're going to learn more about how to use body-based interventions to treat psychological disorders and people can do these things so easily they can change their breathing so easily that it's really proving to be quite effective [Music] in the heart of amsterdam you'll find the nemo science center one of the displays is designed to help children learn about the meaning behind different facial expressions they learn that facial expressions are universal and are common to all cultures roberto valenti and his colleagues helped to design the science center display their company is working on a special project with the university of amsterdam we're teaching computers to understand the body language of humans valenti's company promises fast accurate analysis of facial expressions the analysis is done by using imaging software and computer algorithms so here when i deform them out and erase my uh corners of the mouth you will have an happiness expression if i wrinkle my nose you would have disgust the focus of cycorp is mainly on recognizing the signals that come from your face and of course you can use this signal for many different applications and you can see currently the application is all about market research specifically how to measure a consumer's reaction to an advertisement positive or negative imagine that you can target your advertisement depending on who is in front of it that's a very interesting return of investment for the advertiser and now we can really fine-tune the what ad is being displayed depending on the target group what this means is that not only are we looking at the ad the ad is looking at us and the ad can adjust itself depending on who's looking this is a demonstration of a narrow casting application which will be targeting advertisement to the group of people that are in front of the advertisement screen and you can see here now we have a majority of of mail in the in the camera when the mail get out of the picture we can see that the commercial switches to a female advertisement and uh and we can go back in it switches back to a male advertisement the computer needs to understand the human in order to be able to deliver to the human so not only understand the human on in terms of you know voice recognition but also gestures and and facial expressions [Music] we can also apply this into direct human computer interaction but human robot interaction for instance a robot will be able to understand the body language so to really establish a much more natural form of communication so far computers have not really tapped in this kind of information and when computers can learn like a human and can interact to human like a human i think that's where the interesting consequences and promises of human computer interaction can appear left or looking right i'm really excited about the developing technologies but i also believe that the old-fashioned observation human observational approach is is a critical component that being able to closely observe holistically you have an advantage that machines never will but there's no stopping the machines we see them more and more in our daily lives fingerprint scanners palm printing and iris recognition software it's all becoming routine and while gate recognition is not yet a reality it's surely coming i think that we've just scratched the surface for understanding the complexity of our bodies and all of the expressive channels that we have whether it's face hands posture gait and we're getting some glimpses of how important it is and how interesting it is but how complex it is it's interesting once you explain things you begin to talk to people about body language or they say oh you know that's just common sense and then when you say well how often in the past did you notice a neck touching or ventilating [Music] or you know the pinching of the corner of the mouth to show contempt people really reveal themselves when you stop and look and decipher what's really going on and we don't do that enough [Music] i've learned that non-verbals are more accurate than the spoken word that's true but i think my family would tell you it's there is a burden when you can read people with exactitude [Music] now you see things even before they see them you see marriages falling apart months in advance that's hard why are we doing this and i think it behooves every scientist to have an answer i think the ultimate goal of a better understanding of human behavior is the improvement and betterment of society for for the ages the reason why i'm i'm going to be watching these videos for the next five years of these studies that we've got is so that we can give that information to others so that somebody can improve our society for some reason keep us safer take the criminal off the street or do something that that does us some good the day will come when we will have a much deeper understanding of body language [Music] the question is what will we do with [Music] that [Music] [Music] you