Massey University.
Pennsylvania State University Abington.
J Soc Psychol. 2021 Jul 4;161(4):508-518. doi: 10.1080/00224545.2020.1854648. Epub 2020 Dec 24.
Reciprocating smiles is important for maintaining social bonds as it both signals affiliative intent and elicits affiliative responses. Feelings of social exclusion may increase mimicry as a means to regulate affiliative bonds with others. In this study, we examined whether feelings of exclusion lead people to selectively reciprocate the facial expressions of more affiliative-looking people. Participants first wrote about either a time they were excluded or a neutral event. They then classified 20 smiles-half spontaneous smiles and half posed. Facial electromyography recorded smile muscle activity. Excluded participants distinguished the two smile types better than controls. Excluded participants also showed greater zygomaticus major (mouth smiling) activity toward enjoyment smiles compared to posed smiles; control participants did not. Orbicularis oculi (eye crinkle) activity matched that of the smile type viewed, but did not vary by exclusion condition. Affiliative social regulation is discussed as a possible explanation for these effects.
相互微笑对于维持社会联系很重要,因为它既能传达亲和意图,又能引起亲和反应。社交排斥感可能会增加模仿,作为与他人建立亲和关系的一种手段。在这项研究中,我们研究了被排斥是否会导致人们选择性地回应更具亲和力的人的面部表情。参与者首先写下他们被排斥的经历或中性事件。然后,他们对 20 个微笑进行分类——一半是自然微笑,一半是摆拍微笑。面部肌电图记录了微笑肌肉的活动。与对照组相比,被排斥的参与者能更好地区分两种微笑类型。与摆拍的微笑相比,被排斥的参与者在面对愉悦的微笑时,颧大肌(嘴部微笑)的活动更大;对照组则没有这种情况。眼轮匝肌(眼角皱纹)的活动与所看到的微笑类型相匹配,但不受排斥条件的影响。作为对这些影响的一种可能解释,我们讨论了亲和社会调节。