From Frida Kahlo to Anthony Davis, some people seem to do just fine with a bushy brow -- but that may not be the case for everyone.


In fact, a whimsical new video from NASA's Mark Rober suggests a unibrow can cause some pretty hairy social problems.


"Ever since my personal discovery of tweezers between the 11th and 12th grades, I've long suspected that people without unibrows actually get treated better by the general population," Rober, an engineer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, says in the video.


And so Rober conducted his own citizen science experiment to test his theory.


After a makeup artist fitted Rober with a ginormous synophyrs (the medical term for a unibrow), he went out and tried to start conversations with people in stores. Then he ditched the unibrow and returned to the same stores in the same clothes, and approached people in the same way.


What did he find? People seemed less eager to talk to him when he was sporting one brow instead of two. And reticence wasn't the only unpleasant thing he encountered. People frowned at him. They made fun. Teenagers tried to take his picture. It was enough to make one :-(


Rober's experiment may not have been especially rigorous, but it does put the spotlight on something psychologists say can be a serious problem.


"People form impressions very rapidly and are highly sensitive to deviations from what is perceived as a typical face," Dr. Alex Todorov, professor of psychology at Princeton University, wrote in an email to The Huffington Post.


While it may be more common -- and even a sign of beauty -- in Tajikistan, unibrows can raise brows in Western cultures.


"Generally, faces that are atypical tend to be evaluated negatively," Todorov said.


Such is Todorov's professional judgment. But ultimately he had the same reaction to the video as the rest of us: "I think the experiment is pretty hilarious," he said, summing up his feelings with a familiar emoticon :-)


Or maybe he should have made that |:-)


Also on HuffPost:






  • Create plasma with a grape


    DON'T TRY THIS AT HOME: A carefully cut grape in a microwave can create superheated gas if you set things up just right. It may look like a simple household experiment, but be prepared to destroy your microwave if you mess up!

    (Warning: some language in this video is inappropriate for children.)




  • Create 'elephant toothpaste'


    With yeast, hydrogen peroxide, and assorted household goods, you can create 'elephant toothpaste.' This effect looks a little like one of the popular Diet Coke and Mentos videos on YouTube, but this one is slower and thicker and a little more alien.




  • Turn a light bulb on in a microwave


    Water conducts electricity. Don't believe it? This simple experiment demonstrates the principle in a bright way.




  • Make your own lava lamp


    This one's a little bit complicated, but the end result is impressive and even downright psychedelic.




  • Lower your voice with sulfur hexafluoride


    DON'T TRY THIS AT HOME: In the same way that inhaling helium makes your voice higher, inhaling sulfur hexafluoride makes it lower.