Social Psychological Face Perception: Why Appearance Matters
Brandeis University · Emerson College
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…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 9.06
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 133
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Perception
- Face perception
- Impression formation
- Social perception
- Social psychology
- Cognitive psychology
- Face (sociological concept)
- Reduced inequalities