KID’S SMILES PREDICT THEIR FUTURE MARRIAGE SUCCESS

A new study from DePauw University shows that how intensely people smile in childhood photographs, as indicated by crow’s feet around the eyes, predicts their adult marriage success.  According to the research, people whose smiles were weakest in snapshots from childhood through young adulthood were most likely to report being divorced in middle to old age.  Among the weakest smilers in college photographs, one in four ended up divorcing, compared with one in 20 of the widest smilers.  The same pattern held among even those pictured at an average age of 10.

Scientists speculate that one’s tendency to grin – an example of what psychologists call “thin slices” of behavior that can belie personal traits – reflects his or her underlying emotional disposition.  Positive emotionality influences how other respond to a person, perhaps making that individual more open and likely to seek out situations conducive to a lasting, happy marriage.

But there could be a more cynical explanation, according to Matthew Hertenstein, the psychologist at DePauw who led the new study.  “Maybe people who look happier in photos show a social face to others.  Those may be the same people who are likely to put up with partners because they don’t want to appear unhappy.”

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