1 School of Psychology, Cardiff University.
2 School of Psychology, University of Glasgow.
Psychol Sci. 2017 Sep;28(9):1259-1270. doi: 10.1177/0956797617706082. Epub 2017 Jul 25.
A smile is the most frequent facial expression, but not all smiles are equal. A social-functional account holds that smiles of reward, affiliation, and dominance serve basic social functions, including rewarding behavior, bonding socially, and negotiating hierarchy. Here, we characterize the facial-expression patterns associated with these three types of smiles. Specifically, we modeled the facial expressions using a data-driven approach and showed that reward smiles are symmetrical and accompanied by eyebrow raising, affiliative smiles involve lip pressing, and dominance smiles are asymmetrical and contain nose wrinkling and upper-lip raising. A Bayesian-classifier analysis and a detection task revealed that the three smile types are highly distinct. Finally, social judgments made by a separate participant group showed that the different smile types convey different social messages. Our results provide the first detailed description of the physical form and social messages conveyed by these three types of functional smiles and document the versatility of these facial expressions.
微笑是最常见的面部表情,但并非所有的微笑都相同。一种社会功能理论认为,奖励、亲和和支配性微笑具有基本的社会功能,包括奖励行为、社交联系和协商等级制度。在这里,我们描述了这三种微笑所关联的面部表情模式。具体来说,我们使用数据驱动的方法对这些表情进行了建模,结果表明,奖励性微笑是对称的,并伴随着眉毛上扬,亲和性微笑涉及嘴唇按压,而支配性微笑是不对称的,并包含鼻子皱起和上唇抬起。贝叶斯分类器分析和检测任务表明,这三种微笑类型具有高度的可区分性。最后,由另一个独立的参与者群体进行的社会判断表明,不同的微笑类型传达了不同的社会信息。我们的研究结果首次详细描述了这三种功能性微笑所传达的物理形式和社会信息,并证明了这些面部表情的多样性。