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Two thoughts: I feel like the women with shaped eyebrows made me question my perception of the test, and that I noticed a few of them repeated but with quite a different set of word choices.
I got 27/36 but I thought this test was kinda weird, it says the images were taken from British magazines -- how are they so sure what the people in the photos were actually feeling? So many of the photos to me looked like a model posing for the camera.
Seems like it'd be better to source their own photos in a controlled environment but then again, it is just a test on the internet
29/36, which I'm not surprised about. Despite having autism I'm able to read emotions better than a lot of neurotypical people can. That's because I've spent years honing it and gaining social experience in real life.
Though, I do have to mention that the test could have been a lot better. People don't just show emotions in their eyes. That would be stupid if so. They also show it with their hands, facial expressions, and overall body language. But it is an old test, so this isn't surprising, either.
I got 30/36, which is surprising because I'm usually so bad at those tests, I need to see the whole face of live people, not photos of models maybe thinking about what they will have for lunch, to get an idea, sometimes none of the choices fit what I thought the feeling was.