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  • [INTRO ♪]

  • One of our species' trademark expressions is the smile.

  • And smiling is a form of communicationit's not just about how you feel, but also how you want to make others feel.

  • We use smiles to put each other at ease, to bring people together.

  • So it may seem a little weird that we show off our teeth when we want to be friendly, because teeth are for biting.

  • And many other mammals do bare their teeth as a way to make a threat.

  • Just think about the snarl of a wolf or the open-mouth display of a baboon.

  • It's a shorthand way of saying, like, “Back off if you don't want these to go inside of you!”

  • It's pretty unusual that our smile evolved as a sign of friendliness.

  • But there may be some clues to why it happened in the behavior of our primate cousins.

  • See, many primates show off their teeth for nonaggressive reasons.

  • For example, rhesus macaques make what's called a silent bared-teeth expression as a sign of submission.

  • When a dominant or aggressive opponent is threatening them, they'll show off their teeth as a signal that they don't want any trouble.

  • In other primates, including some macaques and baboons, the same toothy expression shows up while the monkeys are greeting, grooming, and embracing each other.

  • And one of our closest cousins, chimpanzees, show a clear connection between the silent bared-teeth expression and social bonding:

  • the more they flash their teeth at each other, the better they get along.

  • If that sounds familiar, it's because it is also true in humans!

  • Smiles make us feel more comfortable with each other.

  • Studies have found that if you show people pictures of faces, they'll rate smiling faces as more generous and agreeable.

  • A study in 2001 had 120 participants pair up to play a simple game of trust.

  • The players could choose to be selfish and win some money, or work together and win even more money.

  • The catch was that if either player chose to be selfish, they could end the game early and take their payout while the other player got much less.

  • But they'd both win more money if they trusted each other to make the right moves and not be selfish.

  • The players never met each other, though; they were just shown a picture of their partner and had to decide if they trusted them.

  • And the study found that people were more likely to trust a smiling face.

  • Along those same lines, a 2007 study took a look at how people smile when they share.

  • In the case of that study, the experimenters gave pairs of people money to share between thembecause, like, I guess involving money is a good way to get genuine behavior out of people.

  • And they found that people generally smiled more when they were sharing than when they were just talking.

  • What's really cool is that the participants were also asked to report on their own emotions during the study.

  • And surprisingly, the amount that people smiled was mostly unrelated to their feelings of happiness, anger, or other emotions.

  • It wasn't that sharing made people so happy that they couldn't help smiling, it was that smiling was a signal of cooperation.

  • So smiling really is about more than just feeling happy.

  • It's about how we feel around each other and how we want others to feel about us.

  • So it seems like, over our evolution, this toothy expression may have gone from a threat to a signal of non-aggression to the friendly, cooperative smile that we know and love today.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!

  • We are grateful for all of our patrons on Patreon for making episodes like this possible.

  • And a special thank you to Esther, for asking us this question!

  • If you would like to support content like thisor even submit a question of your ownhead over to patreon.com/scishow to learn more.

  • As always, thank you for watching.

  • [OUTRO ♪]

[INTRO ♪]

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