What’s in a Smile? Cultural Differences in the Effects of Smiling on Judgments of Trustworthiness

  • Hiroki Ozono Kokoro Research Center, Kyoto University
  • Motoki Watabe Waseda Institute for Advanced Study, Waseda University
  • Sakiko Yoshikawa Kokoro Research Center, Kyoto University
  • Satoshi Nakashima Department of Cognitive Psychology in Education, Kyoto University
  • Nicholas O. Rule Department of Psychology, Tufts University
  • Nalini Ambady Department of Psychology, Tufts University
  • Reginald B. Adams, Jr. Department of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University
Keywords: trustworthiness, smile, cultural differences, symmetry

Abstract

How do people detect trustworthiness in others? Some researchers have shown that research participants trust smiling faces more than non-smiling faces. We examined cultural differences in this “smile effect.” We investigated whether three elements of a smile (smile intensity at the eyes, smile intensity at the mouth, and facial symmetry) would differently influence American and Japanese participants’ judgments of trustworthiness. In our experiment, images of 54 American and 69 Japanese male faces were initially rated for intensity of expression in the eyes and mouth, and for symmetry of the smile, by Japanese participants. The images were then presented to 142 American and 80 Japanese participants, who were asked to rate each face’s trustworthiness. The results showed that Japanese participants rated as more trustworthy faces with greater upper-half intensity and greater smile symmetry, but rated as less trustworthy faces with greater lower-half intensity. In contrast, American participants rated as more trustworthy faces with greater lower-half intensity, but there was no influence of upper-half smile intensity, nor of smile symmetry.
Published
2010-05-04