Social Attributions from Faces: Determinants, Consequences, Accuracy, and Functional Significance
Princeton University · Carnegie Mellon University · +1 more institution
Abstract
Since the early twentieth century, psychologists have known that there is consensus in attributing social and personality characteristics from facial appearance. Recent studies have shown that surprisingly little time and effort are needed to arrive at this consensus. Here we review recent research on social attributions from faces. Section I outlines data-driven methods capable of identifying the perceptual basis of consensus in social attributions from faces (e.g., What makes a face look threatening?). Section II describes nonperceptual determinants of social attributions (e.g., person knowledge and incidental associations). Section III discusses evidence that attributions from faces predict important social…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 41.07
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 196
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Attribution
- Psychology
- Social psychology
- Social perception
- Perception
- Social cognition
- Personality
- Face (sociological concept)