Department of Behavioral Science.
Department of Psychology.
Emotion. 2019 Jun;19(4):741-745. doi: 10.1037/emo0000459. Epub 2018 Jul 2.
Previous studies have found that Westerners value high intensity positive emotions more than people in China and Japan, yet few studies have compared actual rates of smiling across cultures. Particularly rare are observational studies of real-time smiling (as opposed to smiling in photos). In Study 1, raters coded student ID photos of European American and East Asian students in the U.S. In Study 2, observers coded people's smiles as they walked outside in the U.S. and China. Both studies found that people from East Asia smiled much less-about 50% less. These differences could reflect differences in happiness across cultures, norms of smiling, or differences in ideal affect. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
先前的研究发现,西方人比中国人和日本人更重视高强度的积极情绪,但很少有研究比较跨文化的实际微笑率。特别罕见的是对实时微笑(而不是照片中的微笑)进行的观察性研究。在研究 1 中,评分者对美国的欧裔美国人和东亚学生的学生证照片进行了编码。在研究 2 中,观察者对人们在美国和中国户外行走时的微笑进行了编码。这两项研究都发现,东亚人微笑的次数要少得多——大约少 50%。这些差异可能反映了文化之间的幸福感差异、微笑规范或理想情感的差异。(APA,2019 版权所有)。