Audio By Carbonatix
Go ahead and smile. It may be Mother Nature's way of giving you a youthful appearance.
A new study showed that when people looked at photos of happy faces, they guessed the age of the person in the photo as younger than in photos of the same person with a neutral or angry expression.
Researchers say it's the first study to show that facial expressions have a major impact on the accuracy and bias of age estimates.
The study is published in Psychology and Aging.
"Although age estimates can often be based on multiple cues, there are many situations in which a picture of a person's face is the only information that is immediately available," researcher Manuel C. Voelkle of the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin, and colleagues write.
"In particular, with the rise of private- or business-related social networks like Facebook, flickr, LinkedIn, and many others, it has become common practice to share pictures, often without additional background information," they write.
Researchers say pictures of happy faces may be misleading because smiling or laughing creates temporary wrinkles around the eyes and mouth. In a picture, it is harder to tell the difference between temporary wrinkles and real ones.
In addition, smiling has been shown to make people look more attractive, which may make them appear younger.
Guessing Age in Photos
In the study, 154 young, middle-aged, and older adults guessed the age of 171 faces of young, middle-aged, and older men and women with various expressions portrayed on a total of 2,052 photographs. Each face displayed either an angry, fearful, disgusted, happy, sad, and neutral expression.
The results showed facial expressions had a big effect on the accuracy of age estimates.
Compared with other facial expressions, the age of neutral faces was estimated most accurately.
Meanwhile, the age of happy or smiling faces was most likely to be underestimated by an average of about two years.
Researchers say the age of the person guessing also played a role.
Overall, people found it harder to guess the age of older faces than younger faces. And the older people were, the worse they were at correctly guessing someone's age.
But older and younger adults were better at guessing the age of people their own age compared with other age groups.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Supreme Court appointments require more than 15 years’ experience – Justice Adjei-Frimpong
15 minutes -
Fire destroys 3-bedroom house at Bogyawe
38 minutes -
Why the Supreme Court is a “policy court” – Justice Richard Adjei-Frimpong breaks it down
42 minutes -
Playback: The Law discussed Supreme Court @150
2 hours -
MTN Momo staff walk to promote wellness and fitness
2 hours -
Assafuah: Sedina Attionu’s return from Nevada will test government’s commitment to accountability
2 hours -
How GRA’s Modified Taxation Scheme is boosting revenue compliance & SMEs competitiveness
2 hours -
Stonebwoy Can Do It: A call to unite behind 2026 BHIM Fest
3 hours -
World Shea Expo returns to Tamale for 2026 edition
3 hours -
Prioritise cocoa sector with better prices, timely payments-Annoh-Dompreh urges NDC
3 hours -
Lands and Mines Watch Ghana endorses Heath Goldfields’ mining capacity
4 hours -
Gbintiri residents protest alleged diversion of 24-hour market project
4 hours -
Justin Bieber headlines Coachella with nostalgia-fuelled set
4 hours -
Ukraine and Russia accuse each other of hundreds of ceasefire violations
4 hours -
Asha Bhosle: The sound of Bollywood dies aged 92
5 hours