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Orthodontic treatment positively influences behavior and perception on age recognition.

TL;DR

OBJECTIVES: To investigate how smiles and occlusion influence behavioral response and the perception of age. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Adult laypeople (N = 80; 19-84 years) were asked to "estimate the age" and "select the younger and healthier face" from pretreatment (pre-Tx) and posttreatment (post-Tx) neutral (N) and smiling (S) face photographs of female orthodontic patient models (N = 18; 25-66 years), along with eye tracking. A survey was conducted to monitor subjective perceptions of age. Age

Why This Matters

OBJECTIVES: To investigate how smiles and occlusion influence behavioral response and the perception of age.

Credibility Assessment Preliminary — 38/100
Study Design
Rigor of the research methodology
5/20
Sample Size
Whether the study was sufficiently powered
7/20
Peer Review
Review status and journal reputation
10/20
Replication
Has this finding been independently reproduced?
6/20
Transparency
Funding disclosure and data availability
10/20
Overall
Sum of all five dimensions
38/100

OBJECTIVES: To investigate how smiles and occlusion influence behavioral response and the perception of age.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Adult laypeople (N = 80; 19-84 years) were asked to "estimate the age" and "select the younger and healthier face" from pretreatment (pre-Tx) and posttreatment (post-Tx) neutral (N) and smiling (S) face photographs of female orthodontic patient models (N = 18; 25-66 years), along with eye tracking. A survey was conducted to monitor subjective perceptions of age. Age estimation toward peers and nonpeers was compared among young (19-39 years), middle-aged (40-59 years), and older adult (≥60 years) participants.
RESULTS: Greater numbers of post-Tx faces were rated as younger than the actual age when compared with pre-Tx faces (P < .001). Post-Tx/S was most frequently selected as looking younger and healthier (P < .001). Fixation time on the mouth region was significantly higher for S than for N during the tasks (P < .001). For older adults, increase in the ratio of being estimated as younger following Tx was significantly higher for peers than for nonpeers (P < .05).
CONCLUSIONS: Individuals with ideal occlusion and smiling were more likely to be perceived as younger by others, indicating a positive influence of orthodontic treatment on age perception. Older adults may benefit from orthodontic treatment for improving their smiles and for being judged younger by others.

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