Boards Index › Fun and humour › Tests, quizzes and games › spot the fake smile
-
AuthorPosts
-
30 May, 2006 at 11:03 pm #4206
how many can you get right?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/humanbody/mind/surveys/smiles/index.shtml
my score was 13/20 8)
12 June, 2006 at 9:55 pm #22215513 out of 20 too
13 June, 2006 at 2:24 am #222156Spot The Fake Smile
Results
You got 16 out of 20 correctLook at the labels below each image to see which smiles are genuine and which are fake.
Ticks and crosses show which smiles you got right and wrong.
Click on the image if you want to see the smile again.
Most people are surprisingly bad at spotting fake smiles. One possible explanation for this is that it may be easier for people to get along if they don’t always know what others are really feeling.
Although fake smiles often look very similar to genuine smiles, they are actually slightly different, because they are brought about by different muscles, which are controlled by different parts of the brain.
Fake smiles can be performed at will, because the brain signals that create them come from the conscious part of the brain and prompt the zygomaticus major muscles in the cheeks to contract. These are the muscles that pull the corners of the mouth outwards.
Genuine smiles, on the other hand, are generated by the unconscious brain, so are automatic. When people feel pleasure, signals pass through the part of the brain that processes emotion. As well as making the mouth muscles move, the muscles that raise the cheeks – the orbicularis oculi and the pars orbitalis – also contract, making the eyes crease up, and the eyebrows dip slightly.
Lines around the eyes do sometimes appear in intense fake smiles, and the cheeks may bunch up, making it look as if the eyes are contracting and the smile is genuine. But there are a few key signs that distinguish these smiles from real ones. For example, when a smile is genuine, the eye cover fold – the fleshy part of the eye between the eyebrow and the eyelid – moves downwards and the end of the eyebrows dip slightly.
Scientists distinguish between genuine and fake smiles by using a coding system called the Facial Action Coding System (FACS), which was devised by Professor Paul Ekman of the University of California and Dr Wallace V. Friesen of the University of Kentucky.
9 September, 2006 at 10:43 pm #222157Spot The Fake Smile
Results
You got 9 out of 20 correct:evil: :evil: :evil:
11 September, 2006 at 8:15 am #22215816 out of 20
11 September, 2006 at 10:14 am #222159B@gger…12 out of twenty :shock: Really surprised me I got so taken in by ten of the lying swine :? :oops:
11 September, 2006 at 10:17 am #222160Sh/i/te…I cannae count…I meant EIGHT of the duplicitous barstards :oops:
11 September, 2006 at 10:11 pm #22216111 September, 2006 at 10:16 pm #222162@rubyred wrote:
@sweetasbaileez wrote:
17 out of 20 does that make me a hard person to deceive ???!!!! :wink: :P
does it fook it means ya have not sussed out im really a bearded bloke from Barsnley !!
can i have them pictures back i emailed you then :shock: :shock: :oops: :wink:
11 September, 2006 at 10:20 pm #222163@rubyred wrote:
hell no..me and my mates from the pigeon fanciers club masterb@te nightly over them !
jesus rubes :!: :oops: shouldn’t i be paid for that :?: after all do i look like an ageing fat ginger woman whos cheap :!: :P :wink:
-
AuthorPosts
Get involved in this discussion! Log in or register now to have your say!