ChatterBank1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It is a gesture instinctively evolved by some of the apes as language of appeasement. Baring the teeth while frowning has the opposite meaning and is a sign of aggression.
I recently read a nature book where a whole chapter was devoted to natural sign language by humans. It described how in the 60s new tribes were still being discovered in the Indonesian region, and people who had never seen 'white man' before were able to communicate with signs, smiling being not only a reaction to something funny but also agreement. The tribes that were part hunters also had an extensive semaphore language where they could clearly communicate with each other for over 200metres+.
I recently read a nature book where a whole chapter was devoted to natural sign language by humans. It described how in the 60s new tribes were still being discovered in the Indonesian region, and people who had never seen 'white man' before were able to communicate with signs, smiling being not only a reaction to something funny but also agreement. The tribes that were part hunters also had an extensive semaphore language where they could clearly communicate with each other for over 200metres+.
wildwood....you wouldn't happen to know what book that was do you? i'd like to try to find it. thank you so much. thanks for the answers guys. and if any of y'all have anymore answers, i'd love to hear them, or any suggestions as to where i could take my research, because, i'm quite frankly not having much luck. lol.
There's a review of studies on the origins of primate/human facial expressions, including smiling, here.