People interpret a dog’s emotions based on its situation and have “a big blind spot” for the actual animal, a new study found. “When it comes to just perceiving dog emotions, we think we ...
Our suggestion: Think of anger as a flow of emotion, like water through a garden hose. By thinking of the flow of anger, you can unpack its key dimensions: its path and strength. Understanding ...
We show our emotions using our facial expressions as well as our body language. The way your body shakes with laughter during a comedy routine versus the restrained movements of a heartfelt reunion ...
Often (but not always), dice mechanics are central to the fiction that emerges ... story (in a way that a “yes/no” oracle answer never will be). Mindset 3: play emotion, not mechanics. Story hangs on ...