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  • https://stats.libretexts.org/Courses/Luther_College/Psyc_350%3ABehavioral_Statistics_(Toussaint)/14%3A_Case_Studies/14.06%3A_Smiles_and_Leniency
    To study the research on effects of smiling Research on the effects of smiling has backed this up and shown that a smiling person is judged to be more pleasant, attractive, sincere, sociable, and comp...To study the research on effects of smiling Research on the effects of smiling has backed this up and shown that a smiling person is judged to be more pleasant, attractive, sincere, sociable, and competent than a non-smiling person. There is evidence that smiling can attenuate judgments of possible wrongdoing. This phenomenon termed the "smile-leniency effect" was the focus of a study by Marianne LaFrance & Marvin Hecht in 1995. This may limit the generalizeability of the results.
  • https://stats.libretexts.org/Courses/Cerritos_College/Introduction_to_Statistics_with_R/20%3A_Case_Studies_and_Data/20.06%3A_Smiles_and_Leniency
    To study the research on effects of smiling Research on the effects of smiling has backed this up and shown that a smiling person is judged to be more pleasant, attractive, sincere, sociable, and comp...To study the research on effects of smiling Research on the effects of smiling has backed this up and shown that a smiling person is judged to be more pleasant, attractive, sincere, sociable, and competent than a non-smiling person. There is evidence that smiling can attenuate judgments of possible wrongdoing. This phenomenon termed the "smile-leniency effect" was the focus of a study by Marianne LaFrance & Marvin Hecht in 1995. This may limit the generalizeability of the results.

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