From Voice ~ Topics: case studies, metrics of effectiveness
Facial Feedback Hypothesis
While this response did not yield the secret recipe of the McSmile, it did point to the unusual ability of the smile to reproduce itself. Smiles are infectious. Smiles are also innate. We are born with the ability to smile, and smiles are recognized across cultures. “Smile and the world smiles with you,” as my Granny used to say.
It is the ability of smiles to make others smile that is transforming a facial expression into a global industry.
A great deal of research is now being done to determine how exactly smiles work and why. The reason for most of this research has less to do with the woman behind the cash register as it does with the cash register itself. Researchers are incorporating smiles and other facial expressions into new interfaces. As a result, smiles are being subjected to rather humorless examination. A recent conference on the facial expressions in Seoul South Korea included a paper titled, “Multimodal Coordination of Facial Action, Head Rotation, and Eye Motion during Spontaneous Smiles.”
One of the pioneers of the study of smiles was a graphic artist named Harvey Ball. It was Ball’s belief that the power of the smile was so great that even a symbolic representation was enough to cheer people up. In the early 60s, Ball was assigned to promote the State Mutual Life Assurance Company’s friendship campaign. Ball first drew a curved line on a yellow circle. Afraid that disgruntled employees would attempt to subvert his creation by turning the smile upside down, Ball added two dots to represent eyes. In less than ten minutes, the phenomenon of the “smiley face” was born. If Ball himself can be taken as an example, the smiley face had its desired effect. Even though Ball never saw any of the profits from his creation, according to his son, he left the world with no regrets, happy to have this as his legacy.
The representation of smiles has come a long way since then. At the artificial intelligence lab at MIT, researchers are engaged in understanding the relationship between facial expressions and emotional states for the purpose of creating advanced robot interfaces. One robot, called “Kismet”, is able to reproduce a wide range of emotions using an interface that includes synthetic eyes, mouth and ears. Studies have shown that when spoken words are combined with the appropriate facial expressions, people are twice as likely to understand what is being said and far more likely to remember it (Massaro 2000). According to Dr. Cynthia Breazeal of MIT, in order for robots to interact effectively with people, scientists and designers will need to figure out how machines display and react to emotion, in addition to how they display and react to other types of input. The researchers at MIT foresee a time when robots will perform tasks ranging from cleaning your apartment to taking your order at a restaurant to babysitting your toddler. And you can bet that they will do it with a smile.
Once they get the hang of it, there is good reason to believe that robots will surpass their human counterparts in their ability to smile. Ironically, the fact that computers do not have to feel the emotions they display gives them a big advantage. Smiles are not all created equal. A “true” or zygomatic smile requires the contraction of special zygomaticus muscles in the face that are directly linked to the cerebral cortex. The close connection between these muscles and emotion means that a zygomatic smile is very difficult to fake. Humans are also very adept at detecting false smiles. We can tell from a young age when people are “faking it.” If the woman at McDonald’s smile struck me as insincere, it probably was. She couldn’t help it if giving me my Big Mac didn’t make her day.
The perfect gleam of a robotic smile may raise the bar for all of us. We will become used to seeing perfect zygomatic smiles on the faces of robots and come to expect the same from our human interfaces. Our friends at McDonalds will be expected to smile more and more sincerely even as they are inevitably replaced. What effect will this happy contest have on us?
In the late 1990’s Safeway, the country’s second largest supermarket chain, began to require employees to smile and greet customers with direct eye contact. A year later, an article in USA Today titled “Safeway's Mandatory Smiles Pose Danger, Workers Say" reported that 12 female employees had filed grievances over the mandatory smile policy. Apparently, their smiles were taken at face value. The women reported being repeatedly sexually propositioned by their male customers.
According to the “facial feedback hypothesis,” while we may get some extra attention from our own species, we do not need to fear the dangers of over-smiling. Smiling itself produces feelings of happiness. The hypothesis states, “Involuntary facial movements provide sufficient peripheral information to drive emotional experience.” (Bernstein 2000) The research to prove this hypothesis seems appropriately comical. In one study participants were instructed watch cartoons holding a pencil in their mouths, either between their lips or between their teeth. People with the pencils in their lips were therefore prevented from smiling. It turned out that the people with the pencils in their teeth, who could smile, rated cartoons funnier than those who could not (David and Palladino 2000).
Thinking about McDonalds, however, made me wonder if happiness is really what smiling is all about. My suspicions were confirmed when I learned that the human smile is believed to have evolved from the grimaces of primates. These grimaces were not evidence of pleasure, but rather of fear. The submissive grin of the primate sends the message, “I am afraid and therefore friendly.” The main message I received from the woman behind the counter at McDonalds was not “Gee, this is a fun place to work,” but rather, “Gee, I don’t want to get fired so I’ll try to make you happy.” And, frankly, I was less interested in whether or not she was having a good day than whether or not she was going to hold the pickles. What I want from my burger interface—whether human or robot—is not contentment, but a sense of control. It turns out that the best way to communicate this complex relationship may be to smile-like-you’re-faking-it. So, until robots master the subtle art of deception, perhaps we humans can continue to save face. But can I still have my hashbrowns, please :)
References:
Bernstein, D. A., Clarke-Stewart, A., Penner, L. A., Roy, E. J., & Wickens, C. D. (2000). Psychology (5th ed.). Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company.
Davis, S. F., & Palladino, J. J. (2000). Psychology (3rd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc.
B. Massaro, D.W. (2000). Perceptual interfaces in human computer interaction. In Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Multimedia and Expo (ICME’00)(Vol.1, pp.563-566). New York, NY.
-
David, this is a very interesting article. It would have been great to see some more examples directly related to some of the stuff we do. (For example, PeoplePC's [ http://www.peoplepc.com /] logo ... which for an internet company has surprisingly not been changed).
I mean, how many brochures, annual reports and web sites have we designed with a smiling person on the cover? It's an easy sell, who doesn't like to be smiled at. It's also like the new "Thank You" ads by Citibank, where a simple verbal gesture can do so much. I think smiling is underrated, while politically correct pats on the back are overrated.
The McDonald's example is a great one of forced friendliness, everything about it feels like it is trying way, way too hard, even when they have that little TV animation of the smile (can't remember on which of their ads they do this) it feels fake.
And lastly, I prefer my smiley emoticons with a space between the colon and the parenthesis : ) -
Thanks for the comments Armin. It's true, smiles in advertising are so pervasive as to be almost invisible to me. What initially interested me in the McSmile is the disconnect with (or irrelevance of) the emotions of the smiler. When I go into a McDonalds it always depresses me--I mean, haven't those people suffered enough? Do they also have to pretend to enjoy it? It seems like the last priviledge of the downtrodden is the right to feel sullen--and to show it. But then it occurred to me that they are not really pretending to enjoy it so much as communicating to the patron that they aim to please. It is the ultimate act of submission. "Not only will I do this thing for you but I will pretend that I like doing it--even though both of us are in on the ruse." I suppose some people really love holding my pickles. But usually it looks fake--and, like most humans, I am pretty good at telling the difference. Thinking about robots (and other interfaces), I began to wonder whether they could capture the subtleties of this power relationship. Or, will we just end up with a bunch of happy looking robots? Oh well, as long as they make good martinis.
-
If you want to read more I recommend A Brief History of the Smile by Angus Trumble. It is actually not a brief history, it is a very thorough and maniacally well researched history.
-
I Love Goobers.
-
Very thorough information.
Thanks. -
FBI / CIA world inhumane domination
international | rights and freedoms | other press Tuesday November 07, 2006 17:48 by geral sosbee - self gsosbee at yahoo dot com fascist uSA 9564593024
The fox is in the hen House
The world's people are sitting ducks at the mercy of the tyrants, murderers and terrorists of the uSA.
Geral Sosbee
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
the parable of the fox in the hen house 0 comments
7 Nov 2006 @ 17:16
From Brownsville, Texas
November 7, 2007
Little Noticed and Ominous Headlines:
"FBI steps up probes of politicians, might run sting
Chicago Tribune - Nov 06 5:12 AM
The new chief of the FBI's criminal division, which is swamped with public corruption cases, says the bureau is ramping up its ability to catch crooked politicians and might run an undercover sting on Congress. "
"Bill would put all warrants in FBI system
Boston Globe - Nov 07 1:08 AM
Governor Mitt Romney filed legislation yesterday that would require local police departments to put all felony and serious misdemeanor arrest warrants into a national FBI database. This would enable any police department in the state to check quickly whether a suspect has a recent history of troublemaking or violence, the governor's office said. "
Sosbee writes:
All "troublemaking" is a new category of federal offenses and subjects the accused to a new and non erasable label . The corrupt police in all jurisdictions can now destroy or otherwise 'set up' any person who discloses governmental atrocities or misconduct. Troublemakers beware.
In concert with the ever increasing and far reaching authority of the federal authorities over all local law enforcement, the fbi and the cia now expand their menacing presence inside the halls of the legislature (a formerly separate and now unequal branch of government which had originally been established to safeguard the constitutional rights of the citizens against possible abuses by the other branches of government). The parable of the fox in the hen house (the foxes being the fbi and the cia thugs, referred to below as foxies) takes on a new meaning as the foxies enter the House to force (by blackmail or threat of arrest) compliance upon the high flying hens:
The foxies now enjoy a kind of free for all frolic at the funny farm where the hen house (occupied by congress and the courts) has become a very dirty and corrupt culture removed from the rest of the world by the luxuries afforded the occupants therein. On the outside, the sitting ducks go about their lives, largely unaware that soon they too may be targeted (around the globe) for imagined offenses (such as trouble making, or activism) in all jurisdictions and in all countries; the foxies after all now enjoy by their global reach a certain unimpeachable authority wherever their guile may take them.See:
[link]
Indeed, many sitting ducks are now being clothed in fox attire and receive pay and other benefits from their ruthless benefactors (the fbi and the cia shrewd foxies). As expected therefore, as one glances at the broader landscape, many sitting ducks are now living in prisons, in war zones , or in poverty, all at the direction of the foxies and their little rat companions (i.e. foxies clothed as ducks but imbued with the minds of rats).
Those sitting ducks who have not yet attracted the attention of the foxies are oblivious to the suffering all around them; for they have their lucrative employment, their comfortable dwellings, their fancy vehicles, and their health benefits (and other perks) to keep them mesmerized. These hypnotized sitting ducks sometimes violently attack their brethren who may from time to time try to highlight the great suffering brought about by the liars and traitors who constitute the band of frolicking foxies and their little rat companions.
In esence today, only the disenfranchised and the imprisoned ostensibly stand to gain anything by attacking the standards established by the foxies. The vast numbers of sitting ducks refuse to see the encroaching enslavement of their kind for all times , as forecast by the troublemakers. Never mind that the foxies are themselves murderers, torturers and terrorists; never mind that the future of the world and indeed the destiny of the human species is presently being shaped and defined by the lowest form of human intellect as reflected in the characers of these foxies. The sitting ducks thus leave to their offspring the ever worsening task of dealing with the miscreant foxies and their little rat associates.
For now, the foxies are in complete control; and for as long as the sitting ducks at large remain lethargic in the face of widespread suffering and chaos, the concepts of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are long forgotten and unfulfilled promises once concocted in the hen house for the purpose of appeasing the troublemakers.
Related Link: http://www.sosbeevfbi.com -
I totally agree about that a lot of graphic designers are really want to join to AIGA but they can't afford the annual fees, and my word here as an experienced graphic designer (+14 years) (EVERRY REAL GRAPHIC DESIGNER OR ORGANIZATION WHOM RELATED TO THE GRAPHIC DESIGN FIELDS ARE MUST BE CONNECTED TO AIGA!! YES THE BENEFITS THERE IS VALUABLE, REALLY IT WORTH DOUBLES OF THE ANNUAL FEES, PROCESS, GUIDELINES, EXPEIENCES, CORRECTIONS, REAL ADVISES TO ANY GRAPHIC DESIGNER) IT WORTH MORE THAN THE ANNUAL FEES, but the annual fees is still not affordable specially from the international Graphic designers who lives in an low economic countries although they are Real Graphic Designers and can really help others.
-
Thank you very much Mr. Womack for this interesting article. I have found it helpful as I am at the start of doing extensive research on the effects of smiling and human contact (hugging) on people. Any further information or studies that you could give me would be greatly appreciated. Please feel free to email me. Thank you.
Hidden-In-Christ,
Jon

Fig. 1
Fig. 2
Fig. 3
Comments