Princeton University Radboud University Nijmegen
Columbia University.
Psychol Sci. 2014 Jul;25(7):1404-17. doi: 10.1177/0956797614532474. Epub 2014 May 27.
Studies on first impressions from facial appearance have rapidly proliferated in the past decade. Almost all of these studies have relied on a single face image per target individual, and differences in impressions have been interpreted as originating in stable physiognomic differences between individuals. Here we show that images of the same individual can lead to different impressions, with within-individual image variance comparable to or exceeding between-individuals variance for a variety of social judgments (Experiment 1). We further show that preferences for images shift as a function of the context (e.g., selecting an image for online dating vs. a political campaign; Experiment 2), that preferences are predictably biased by the selection of the images (e.g., an image fitting a political campaign vs. a randomly selected image; Experiment 3), and that these biases are evident after extremely brief (40-ms) presentation of the images (Experiment 4). We discuss the implications of these findings for studies on the accuracy of first impressions.
在过去的十年中,对面部外观的第一印象的研究迅速增加。几乎所有这些研究都依赖于每个目标个体的单个面部图像,并且印象的差异被解释为源自个体之间稳定的相貌差异。在这里,我们表明,同一个人的图像可以产生不同的印象,并且个体内图像的差异与各种社会判断的个体间差异相当或超过(实验 1)。我们进一步表明,对图像的偏好会随着上下文的变化而变化(例如,在线约会与政治活动的选择;实验 2),并且偏好可以通过图像的选择进行可预测的偏向(例如,符合政治活动的图像与随机选择的图像;实验 3),并且在图像的极短(40 毫秒)呈现后,这些偏见是显而易见的(实验 4)。我们讨论了这些发现对第一印象准确性研究的影响。