Applying Psychology
in the 21st Century
Smiling Athletes: Do
Their Facial Expressions
Come Naturally?
There’s no more
stirring sight than medal-
winning Olympic athletes standing on the
podium as their national anthem is played.
Have you ever wondered why—no matter
what the winners’ native countries—their
facial expressions are so readily under-
standable?
The question of whether the similarity
of basic facial expressions are due to in-
nate, inborn factors or if people learn them
in similar ways
across cultures has fasci-
nated psychologists for decades. A new
study sheds light on this issue, adding to
the evidence that basic facial expressions
are inborn rather than learned.
The researchers used a clever tactic to
approach this question: They examined the
facial expressions of people blind from
birth who, of course,
could not have learned
these behaviors by observing them in oth-
ers. Judo athletes who won medals in the
Olympic Games were photographed when
they completed their matches, during the
awards ceremony, and when they were on
the medalists’ podium.
Their facial expres-
sions were compared with blind judo
athletes—some of them blind from birth—
who won medals in the Paralympic Games,
a similar competition for athletes with dis-
abilities. The blind medalists were photo-
graphed at corresponding times to the
sighted ones. Comparisons of the photo-
graphs revealed
that the blind athletes
expressed anger, contempt, disgust, sadness,
surprise, and smiling behavior in the same
ways as the sighted athletes did (Ekman,
2003; Matsumoto & Willingham, 2009).
Most of the blind athletes smiled when
they fi nished their matches and were
standing on the podium, and nearly all
produced genuine
smiles when they were
receiving their medals. The sighted athletes
showed comparable frequency of smiling
across these different contexts. More inter-
estingly, of the blind athletes who won
silver medals (who had lost the match and
the gold), none smiled following the
match, but most
smiled politely while on
the
podium and while receiving their
medals. This is also what the sighted silver
medalists did, showing that all the athletes
knew to put on a pleased expression at the
appropriate time.
The athletes who were blind from birth
showed no differences from the athletes who
became blind later in life.
These fi ndings col-
lectively show that blind and sighted people
express emotion on their faces in the same
ways across different contexts, suggesting
that observation of others is not a precondi-
tion for learning facial expression of emotion
(Matsumoto & Willingham, 2009).
• How could blind athletes have learned when they would be expected to “smile
politely,” even if they did not feel happiness?
• Although it seems like basic emotions are expressed
similarly across cultures, can
you think of examples of nonverbal behaviors that differ across cultures?
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