Ansfield Matthew E
Lawrence University, Appleton, WI 51914, USA.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2007 Jun;33(6):763-75. doi: 10.1177/0146167206297398. Epub 2007 May 4.
This research tested self-regulation and self-presentation as psychological mechanisms that motivate smiling when distressed. In Study 1, participants viewed moderately and intensely distressing, amusing, and neutral videos in social or nonsocial conditions. Smiling when distressed was most prevalent in conditions in which participants reported the greatest emotional distress. Specifically, while viewing distressing videos, men reported experiencing greater overall distress and also smiled more than women, especially in social conditions and while viewing intensely (as opposed to moderately) distressing stimuli. In general, smiling was related to more negative affect while viewing distressing videos but to more positive affect after viewing such stimuli. Study 2 explored raters' social perceptions of participants from Study 1, confirming that people judge distressed smilers as less socially appropriate and less likable than nonsmilers. Findings suggest that although distressed smiling serves a probable self-regulatory function, it may also bear some negative social consequences.
本研究测试了自我调节和自我呈现作为在痛苦时激发微笑的心理机制。在研究1中,参与者在社交或非社交条件下观看中度和强烈痛苦、有趣和中性的视频。在参与者报告最大情绪痛苦的条件下,痛苦时微笑最为普遍。具体而言,在观看痛苦视频时,男性报告的总体痛苦更大,并且比女性微笑更多,尤其是在社交条件下以及观看强烈(而非中度)痛苦刺激时。总体而言,在观看痛苦视频时微笑与更多负面情绪相关,但在观看此类刺激后与更多正面情绪相关。研究2探讨了研究1中参与者的评分者的社会认知,证实人们认为痛苦微笑者比不微笑者在社交上更不合适且更不可爱。研究结果表明,尽管痛苦微笑可能具有自我调节功能,但它也可能带来一些负面的社会后果。