» Articles » PMID: 33458564

Age of Smile: a Cross-cultural Replication Report of Ganel and Goodale (2018)

Overview
Journal J Cult Cogn Sci
Date 2021 Jan 18
PMID 33458564
Citations 5
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Smiling is believed to make people look younger. Ganel and Goodale (Psychon Bull Rev 25(6):612-616, 10.3758/s13423-017-1306-8, 2018) proposed that this belief is a misconception rooted in popular media, based on their findings that people actually perceive smiling faces as older. However, they did not clarify whether this misconception can be generalized across cultures. We tested the cross-cultural validity of Ganel and Goodale's findings by collecting data from Japanese and Swedish participants. Specifically, we aimed to replicate Ganel and Goodale's study using segregated sets of Japanese and Swedish facial stimuli, and including Japanese and Swedish participants in groups asked to estimate the age of either Japanese or Swedish faces (two groups of participants × two groups of stimuli; four groups total). Our multiverse analytical approach consistently showed that the participants evaluated smiling faces as older in direct evaluations, regardless of the facial stimuli culture or their nationality, although they believed that smiling makes people look younger. Further, we hypothesized that the effect of wrinkles around the eyes on the estimation of age would vary with the stimulus culture, based on previous studies. However, we found no differences in age estimates by stimulus culture in the present study. Our results showed that we successfully replicated Ganel and Goodale (2018) in a cross-cultural context. Our study thus clarified that the belief that smiling makes people look younger is a common cultural misconception.

Citing Articles

The Medusa effect: a registered replication report of Will, Merritt, Jenkins and Kingstone (2021).

Han J, Zhang M, Liu J, Song Y, Yamada Y R Soc Open Sci. 2024; 11(1):231802.

PMID: 38204780 PMC: 10776219. DOI: 10.1098/rsos.231802.


Smiling makes you look older, even when you wear a mask: the effect of face masks on age perception.

Ganel T, Goodale M Cogn Res Princ Implic. 2022; 7(1):84.

PMID: 36068390 PMC: 9448834. DOI: 10.1186/s41235-022-00432-3.


Robustness of the aging effect of smiling against vertical facial orientation.

Yoshimura N, Yonemitsu F, Sasaki K, Yamada Y F1000Res. 2022; 11:404.

PMID: 35811801 PMC: 9247519. DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.111126.3.


The effect of smiling on the perceived age of male and female faces across the lifespan.

Ganel T, Goodale M Sci Rep. 2021; 11(1):23020.

PMID: 34837017 PMC: 8626502. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-02380-2.


The Recognition of Cross-Cultural Emotional Faces Is Affected by Intensity and Ethnicity in a Japanese Sample.

Bonassi A, Ghilardi T, Gabrieli G, Truzzi A, Doi H, Borelli J Behav Sci (Basel). 2021; 11(5).

PMID: 33922502 PMC: 8146535. DOI: 10.3390/bs11050059.