a Brain and Cognition Laboratory, School of Psychology , Flinders University , Adelaide , SA , Australia.
Laterality. 2014;19(5):585-90. doi: 10.1080/1357650X.2014.888076. Epub 2014 Feb 27.
Of all the differences between surgeons and physicians that are discussed in the medical profession and in the community at large, one distinction stands out for its frequency of use: surgeons are less emotional than physicians, particularly in their relationships with patients. Here we tested this stereotype by analysing the portraits that 5914 surgeons and physicians had provided for patients to view when selecting a doctor. There is an asymmetry in the degree to which emotional information is conveyed by the face, with the right side being less expressive than the left. Hence, if the stereotype were true, surgeons would be more likely than physicians to show their right cheek in the photographs. While the results for doctors confirmed previous reports of a difference due to sex in which female doctors were more likely to show the left cheek than male doctors, we found that the doctors' specialization did not predict the way they turned in their portraits. Hence, the notion that surgeons face their patients less emotionally than physicians is not supported by the data.
在医学专业和整个社会中讨论的外科医生和内科医生之间的所有差异中,有一个区别因其使用频率而引人注目:外科医生比内科医生情绪更少,尤其是在他们与患者的关系中。在这里,我们通过分析 5914 名外科医生和内科医生为患者选择医生时提供给患者查看的肖像来检验这种刻板印象。面部传达情感信息的程度存在不对称性,右侧比左侧表达能力差。因此,如果刻板印象是真的,那么外科医生比内科医生更有可能在照片中露出右脸颊。虽然对于医生的结果证实了之前由于性别的差异报告,即女医生比男医生更有可能露出左脸颊,但我们发现医生的专业并不能预测他们在肖像中的转向方式。因此,外科医生面对患者的情绪不如内科医生的观点并没有得到数据的支持。