Witkower Zachary, Tian Laura, Tracy Jessica, Rule Nicholas O
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht129-B, Amsterdam 1018 WS, The Netherlands.
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, 100 St. George Street, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3, Canada.
PNAS Nexus. 2024 Aug 22;3(9):pgae343. doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae343. eCollection 2024 Sep.
People ubiquitously smile during brief interactions and first encounters, and when posing for photos used for virtual dating, social networking, and professional profiles. Yet not all smiles are the same: subtle individual differences emerge in how people display this nonverbal facial expression. We hypothesized that idiosyncrasies in people's smiles can reveal aspects of their personality and guide the personality judgments made by observers, thus enabling a smiling face to serve as a valuable tool in making more precise inferences about an individual's personality. Study 1 ( = 303) supported the hypothesis that smile variation reveals personality, and identified the facial-muscle activations responsible for this leakage. Study 2 ( = 987) found that observers use the subtle distinctions in smiles to guide their personality judgments, consequently forming slightly more accurate judgments of smiling faces than neutral ones. Smiles thus encode traces of personality traits, which perceivers utilize as valid cues of those traits.
人们在短暂互动和初次见面时,以及在拍摄用于虚拟约会、社交网络和职业简介的照片时,都会普遍微笑。然而,并非所有的微笑都是一样的:人们在展示这种非语言面部表情的方式上会出现细微的个体差异。我们假设,人们微笑中的特质能够揭示他们性格的某些方面,并引导观察者做出性格判断,从而使一张笑脸成为推断个人性格的更精确工具。研究1(N = 303)支持了微笑变化能揭示性格的假设,并确定了造成这种泄露的面部肌肉激活情况。研究2(N = 987)发现,观察者利用微笑中的细微差别来指导他们的性格判断,因此对笑脸形成的判断比中性表情的脸略准确。因此,微笑编码了性格特征的痕迹,感知者将其作为这些特征的有效线索加以利用。