Social Psychological Face Perception: Why Appearance Matters
- PMID: 20107613
- PMCID: PMC2811283
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-9004.2008.00109.x
Social Psychological Face Perception: Why Appearance Matters
Abstract
We form first impressions from faces despite warnings not to do so. Moreover, there is considerable agreement in our impressions, which carry significant social outcomes. Appearance matters because some facial qualities are so useful in guiding adaptive behavior that even a trace of those qualities can create an impression. Specifically, the qualities revealed by facial cues that characterize low fitness, babies, emotion, and identity are overgeneralized to people whose facial appearance resembles the unfit (anomalous face overgeneralization), babies (babyface overgeneralization), a particular emotion (emotion face overgeneralization), or a particular identity (familiar face overgeneralization). We review studies that support the overgeneralization hypotheses and recommend research that incorporates additional tenets of the ecological theory from which these hypotheses are derived: the contribution of dynamic and multi-modal stimulus information to face perception; bidirectional relationships between behavior and face perception; perceptual learning mechanisms and social goals that sensitize perceivers to particular information in faces.
References
-
- Aharon I, Etcoff N, Ariely D, Chabris CF, O’Connor E, Breiter HC. Beautiful faces have variable reward value: fMRI and behavioral evidence. Neuron. 2001;32:537–551. - PubMed
-
- Ambadar Z, Schooler JW, Cohen JF. Deciphering the enigmatic face: The importance of facial dynamics in interpreting subtle facial expressions. Psychological Science. 2005;16:403–410. - PubMed
-
- Balaban MT. Affective influences on startle in five-month-old infants Reactions to facial expressions of emotion. Child Development. 1995;58:28–36. - PubMed
-
- Barsalou LW, Niedenthal PM, Barbey AK, Ruppert JA, Ross BH. Social embodiment. In: Ross BH, editor. The psychology of learning and motivation: Advances in research and theory. Vol. 43. Elsevier Science; New York, NY: 2003. pp. 43–92.
-
- Berry DS. Taking people at face value: Evidence for the kernel of truth hypothesis. Social Cognition. 1990a;8:343–361.
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources