Suppr超能文献

除非被口罩抑制,否则面部的可信度印象会影响陈述的可信度。

Facial impression of trustworthiness biases statement credibility unless suppressed by facemask.

作者信息

Marini Marco, Paglieri Fabio, Ansani Alessandro, Caruana Fausto, Viola Marco

机构信息

Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC), Italian National Research Council (CNR), Rome, Italy.

Department of Psychology, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy.

出版信息

Curr Psychol. 2022 Jun 9:1-11. doi: 10.1007/s12144-022-03277-7.

Abstract

UNLABELLED

The impression of trustworthiness based on someone's facial appearance biases our subsequent behavior toward that subject in a variety of contexts. In this study, we investigated whether facial trustworthiness also biases the credibility of utterances associated with that face (H1). We explored whether this bias is mitigated by utterances eliciting reasoning, i.e. explanations (as opposed to factual statements; H2). Moreover, we hypothesized that overimposing facemasks on those faces could enhance/reduce utterance credibility due to social value of mask-wearing (H3), and that facemasks could counter the putative credibility bias introduced by facial trustworthiness (H4). If so, this may be either because facemasks remove the visual information necessary for trustworthiness impression (H4a), or because information is less salient, although it can be retrieved under different circumstances (H4b). An online study (N = 159) was conducted to test these hypotheses. In the first task, subjects saw 48 facial pictures coupled with one utterance and judged the truthfulness/falsity of this utterance. In the second task, they saw again 16 of the faces from the previous tasks and were asked to recall whether the associated utterance was true or false. Findings from the first task support H1 and H4, but not H2 and H3. However, in the second task, where the face is the only available cue, the credibility-mitigation bias exerted by facemask disappears, supporting H4b over H4a. Our results confirm the pervasivity of facial trustworthiness impressions in social cognition, and suggest that facemask can mitigate them, or at least their salience.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12144-022-03277-7.

摘要

未标注

基于某人面部外观产生的可信赖感会在各种情境中影响我们随后对该对象的行为。在本研究中,我们调查了面部可信赖感是否也会影响与该面部相关话语的可信度(假设1)。我们探究了这种偏差是否会因引发推理的话语(即解释,与事实陈述相对;假设2)而减轻。此外,我们假设给这些面部戴上口罩会因戴口罩的社会价值而提高/降低话语可信度(假设3),并且口罩可以抵消面部可信赖感带来的假定可信度偏差(假设4)。如果是这样,这可能是因为口罩消除了产生可信赖感印象所需的视觉信息(假设4a),或者是因为信息不那么显著,尽管在不同情况下可以检索到(假设4b)。我们进行了一项在线研究(N = 159)来检验这些假设。在第一个任务中,受试者看到48张面部图片并配有一句话,然后判断这句话的真假。在第二个任务中,他们再次看到前一个任务中的16张面孔,并被要求回忆相关话语是真是假。第一个任务的结果支持假设1和假设4,但不支持假设2和假设3。然而,在第二个任务中,面部是唯一可用的线索,口罩所产生的可信度减轻偏差消失了,这支持了假设4b而非假设4a。我们的结果证实了面部可信赖感印象在社会认知中的普遍性,并表明口罩可以减轻这些印象,或者至少减轻它们的显著性。

补充信息

在线版本包含可在10.1007/s12144-022-03277-7获取的补充材料。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/78ed/9178339/6aa6b341cba0/12144_2022_3277_Fig1_HTML.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验