Title of article
Not always the best medicine: Why frequent smiling can reduce wellbeing
Author/Authors
Ajay Labroo، نويسنده , , Aparna A. and Mukhopadhyay، نويسنده , , Anirban and Dong، نويسنده , , Ping، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
7
From page
156
To page
162
Abstract
Conventional wisdom (and existing research) suggests that the more people smile, the more positive they feel, and positive feelings are known to enhance wellbeing. Across three studies, instead, we show more frequent smiling does not always increase happiness, and as a consequence, wellbeing. Frequent smiling results in more wellbeing than infrequent smiling only among people who interpret smiling as reactive or reflecting happiness. Among people who interpret smiling as proactive and causing happiness, frequent smiling results in less wellbeing than infrequent smiling. Here, frequent smiling backfires, evoking less happiness than infrequent smiling, which in turn reduces wellbeing. Thus, smiling by itself does not increase happiness, or wellbeing. Instead, the belief that one must already be happy when one smiles is what increases happiness, and as a result, wellbeing. (128 words)
Keywords
Happiness , Lay theories , social cognition , wellbeing , Embodiment
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1961522
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