Journal of Cranio-Maxillo-Facial Surgery
Volume 38, Issue 6 , Pages 409-415, September 2010

A three-dimensional study of facial mimicry in healthy young adults

Functional Anatomy Research Center (FARC), Laboratorio di Anatomia Funzionale dell'Apparato Stomatognatico (LAFAS), Laboratorio di Anatomia Funzionale dell'Apparato Locomotore (LAFAL), Dipartimento di Morfologia Umana e Scienze Biomediche “Città Studi”, Facoltà di Medicina e Chirurgia, Università degli Studi di Milano, via Mangiagalli 31, I-20133 Milano, Italy

Received 8 December 2008; accepted 21 October 2009. published online 26 November 2009.

Summary 

To assess sex-related characteristics in facial movements, and to define a set of reference normal values, 20 healthy young adults (10 men, 10 women) performed six standardized facial movements (maximum smile; free smile; “surprise” with closed mouth; “surprise” with open mouth; right- and left-side eye closures). The three-dimensional coordinates of 21 soft-tissue facial landmarks were recorded by an optoelectronic motion analyzer, their movements computed, and standardized for facial dimensions. Asymmetry indices were calculated. The mouth area had the largest movements. Sex-related differences were found only for the superciliare landmark (men had larger movements than women, p<0.001). Asymmetries in the eyes, mouth and nose were similar in both sexes (p>0.01), with a significant effect of movement (p<0.001): eye and mouth asymmetry was larger during the asymmetric eye closures than during the symmetric movements. The right-side asymmetric movements were somewhat larger than the left-side ones. The total facial movement did not differ between sexes; the “surprise with mouth open” movement had the largest landmark displacements (p<0.001). In conclusion, normal young adult men and women had similar standardized facial movements, except in the forehead. Some individual asymmetry was found in symmetric facial animations; some synkinesis was found even in normal adults.

Keywords: 3D, motion analysis, mimics, face, human, asymmetry

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PII: S1010-5182(09)00194-2

doi:10.1016/j.jcms.2009.10.018

Journal of Cranio-Maxillo-Facial Surgery
Volume 38, Issue 6 , Pages 409-415, September 2010