China Daily

Good mood:

Receiving an image of a smiling face throughout the day could boost mood, researcher­s believe

- By SARAH KNAPTON

Receiving an image of a smiling face throughout the day could boost mood and ease depression and anxiety, researcher­s believe.

It is said that when you smile, the world smiles with you and now neuroscien­tists are putting the time-worn adage to the test.

A new project by University College London is aiming to find out if simply looking at a smiling face could help ease depression and anxiety.

Javier Elkin and Dr Parashkev Nachev have developed a new app called PocketSmil­e which sends a grinning image to smartphone­s throughout the day in the hope it could actually cheer people up.

It follows recent research which suggests that when people see someone smiling, their own smile muscles cannot help but also switch on. The emotion appears to be contagious and it is virtually impossible to avoid mimicking the expression.

Scientists now believe that emotions and expression­s happen at exactly the same time, so triggering one automatica­lly activates the other. It therefore follows, that smiling, or seeing a smile, even when you don’t feel happy could stimulate happy thoughts, or vice versa.

Mr Elkin said: “We know that smiling is contagious. But is the emotion also contagious? Is happiness contagious as well? That’s what we want to find out.

“If you see someone smiling and you consciousl­y try not to smile back at all, and keep a very neutral face, it quickly becomes awkward. Mimicry is inbuilt within is.”

The scientists are hoping that thousands of people will sign up to the PocketSmil­e which takes 20 days. Participan­ts are initially asked about their levels of happiness and depression before being sent images of smiling faces for 10 days and then landscapes for 10 days as a control.

If the app is found to have a beneficial effect on mood it could be used as a stop-gap for depressed people while they wait to be referred for therapy, following an initial diagnosis of anxiety of depression.

“It is a nudge interventi­on,” added Mr Elkin. “Obviously it’s not for people who are severely in need, it’s not supposed to tackle major depression. But if it works the long term goal will be to give people the app while they are waiting for their referral to a profession­al, because it may take up to two months before they see someone.

“This might be able to help them sustain themselves until they can get a referral.”

Scientists say emotions and facial expression­s act like a ‘push-pull’ effect. If you block a negative emotion, a positive effect comes out.

However blocking positive emotions can have the reverse action. Prof Nachev has worked with patients who have complete facial paralysis and it paralyses their emotions.

Dr Nachev said: “The reality is an emotion and its expression go hand in hand. So if you alter the expression you may well alter the emotions. The crucial point is that the expression might have an effect on the mood because it runs in parallel, it’s not secondary. The two are tied together.

“Not only is having, or inducing a facial expression oneself potentiall­y helpful at changing mood, it’s also the case that you can induce it simply by viewing another face.”

It is thought that humans mimic each other to help bonding and also to stay alive. Canned laughter is used in comedies to induce the same response and make jokes sound funnier. In contrast, if you see fear in someone’s face it makes sense to be frightened because whatever is endangerin­g them, could also endanger you.

“The contagion of emotional states is a fundamenta­l feature of human beings, added Dr Nachev.

“The brain is constantly trying to predict what is going to happen next.”

In the future the team hope to work on projects which could alter the sound of the voice to make is sound less anxious, or create an avatar of a person in which they look calmer.

“The obvious applicatio­n for this is call-centre where you can make voices soothing both for yourself and for the other listeners, so even though the call-centre worker is really annoyed or angry he founds perfectly soothing,” added Pro Nachev.

“Then we move to the realm of avatars and the idea is we form some kind of reasonably compelling digital representa­tion of yourself which becomes a distorted digital mirror in a way that is beneficial to you.

“This isn’t about misreprese­nting you to the outside world but it’s about recalibrat­ing the way you think about yourself so as to improve the way we can relate to ourselves.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Receiving an image of a smiling face throughout the day could help boost mood, researcher­s believe.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Receiving an image of a smiling face throughout the day could help boost mood, researcher­s believe.

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