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From scowling to smiling, THIS is how your facial expressions affect your wellbeing

Smiling, squinting and, yep, even looking cranky can all have an impact on your health.
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You may know that smiling makes you happy (yes, even faking a grin sends happy hormones to your brain) but itโ€™s not the only way that the expression you make or the way you move your face might affect your health and happiness.

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Here are eight fascinating face facts you should know.

1. Move your eyes if you want to remember something

Left the house and canโ€™t remember if you locked the door? Then move your eyes left to right for 30 seconds.

In UK trials, this simple eye movement increased recall by 10 per cent. It works because it helps the right and left parts of the brain work together more effectively, which stimulates recall.

Plus, study author Dr Andrew Parker from Manchester Metropolitan University says the bilateral movement also helps you find the source of the memory.

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Thatโ€™s handy for creating what experts call โ€˜true memoryโ€™ โ€“ that is, remembering whether you did lock the door/turn off the gas rather than just thinking you did.

2. Squinting lowers your mood

Summerโ€™s here and generally everyone is happier โ€“ but if you tend to be in a worse mood when the sun shines, it may have nothing to do with temperature and everything to do with narrowing your eyes to reduce glare!

Squinting uses the same muscles as frowning, and according to Italian researchers this actually triggers a knock-on eff ect in your emotions that sparks an aggressive mood. Itโ€™s easy to fix though โ€“ a second group in the trial wore sunglasses and that stopped the reaction.

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3. Looking cranky reduces angerโ€™s harmful effects

Unexpressed anger has been linked to many health

problems, including increased risk of heart disease

and lung problems, but research from Adelaideโ€™s

Carnegie Mellon University found that making an

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angry face when youโ€™re annoyed can reduce angerโ€™s

emotional impact on the body, lowering levels of

stress hormones produced and also the eff ect on the

heart. โ€œAnd this wasnโ€™t extreme anger,โ€ says the studyโ€™s

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author Professor Jennifer Lerner, now at Harvard

University. โ€œIt was more akin to feeling indignation in

the face of an unfair situation.โ€ Remember that next

time someone wonโ€™t let you change lanes in traffi c.

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4. Smiling through stress protects your heart

Faking a smile when the pressure is on actually reduces the normal increase in heart rate that occurs during a stressful situation, potentially reducing some of the negative health effects, a US study has found.

โ€œThe next time you are stuck in traffic or are experiencing some other type of stress, try to hold your face in a smile for a moment,โ€ suggests study author Professor Sarah Pressman from the University of California, Irvine.

โ€œNot only will it help you โ€˜grin and bear itโ€™ psychologically, it might actually help your heart health too.โ€

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5. Nodding helps build self-confidence

Youโ€™re about to run 10km, youโ€™ve trained hard and you think youโ€™re going to do a good time. Repeat all of that to yourself at the start line while nodding your head and it could be more likely to happen.

Why? Because according to research at Ohio State University, if you nod while trying to convince yourself of something youโ€™re more likely to believe it.

โ€œWe often think of nodding as something that communicates to other people but it turns out that itโ€™s also communicating to ourselves,โ€ says study author Richard Petty.

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6. Do you look like youโ€™re frowning even when youโ€™re not

Then you might be drinking more than you should. In Chinese medicine, lines between the brows are signs that your liver is under pressure, which could be related to overdoing it in terms of alcohol or fatty food.

โ€œHowever, the area between the brows also reflects issues of emotions โ€˜controlledโ€™ by the liver โ€“ anger, frustration, irritation and impatience,โ€ says Melbourne-based Chinese medicine practitioner Jason Chong.

โ€œThe deeper the lines the more signifi cant the issue.โ€ The number of lines also counts โ€“ two vertical lines, so you look as if youโ€™re frowning, is linked to inappropriate expression emotions, so you might be holding things in, or have a short fuse that gets you into trouble.

7. Chewing might stop you worrying

Itโ€™s more a facial movement than expression but researchers at the UKโ€™s University of Reading found that chewing gum is a brilliant way to remove โ€˜earwormsโ€™ โ€“ you know those songs that get stuck in your head and wonโ€™t go away.

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But lead author Dr Phil Beaman suspects that it might also be a good way to turn off negative types of inner speech โ€“ like when we worry about nothing or have a poor body image.

Exactly how it works isnโ€™t known but chewing does interfere with how we hear sounds in our head.

8. Canโ€™t show surprise? You might need a check-up

Not being able to register emotions effectively can be a surprise side effect of heart and lung problems, say US doctors who examined a group of patients in emergency hospital departments who were all suffering chest pain and breathing problems.

The fact the patients werenโ€™t able to show surprise was particularly telling โ€“ those who couldnโ€™t do it were more likely to have a more serious problem with their heart or lungs.

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โ€œBeing sick creates acute hormonal and neural signals, interpreted by the brain as a combination of fear, disgust and sadness, which converts to a โ€˜sick faceโ€™,โ€ says Dr Jeff rey Kline from Indiana University in the US. When this sets in, the ability to express other emotions properly is affected.

โ€œImagine the level of surprise on a personโ€™s face at their surprise birthday party โ€“ sick people never look like that. The most they can muster is the equivalent of getting something unexpected in the mail.โ€ One day Dr Kline hopes the โ€˜surprise test โ€˜ might be used to screen people in emergency, helping to determine who might need help fastest.

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