Recent research has documented that competent-looking political candidates do better in U.S. elections and that babyfaced individuals are generally perceived to be less competent than maturefaced individuals. Taken together, this suggests that babyfaced political candidates are perceived as less competent and therefore fare worse in elections. We test this hypothesis, making use of photograph-based judgments by 2,772 respondents of the facial appearance of 1,785 Finnish political candidates. Our results confirm that babyfacedness is negatively related to inferred competence in politics. Despite this, babyfacedness is either unrelated or positively related to electoral success, depending on the sample of candidates
Previous research suggests that voting in elections is influenced by appearance-based personality in...
© 2008 International Society of Political Psychology. Permission to post published version granted b...
In low-information elections, voters are often faced with the task of choosing from a list of unknow...
Recent research has documented that competent-looking political candidates do better in U.S. electio...
Recent research has documented that competent-looking political candidates do better in U.S. electio...
Conventional wisdom, and a growing body of behavioral research, suggests that the nonverbal image of...
Recent research finds that naive survey participants ’ rapid evaluations of the facial competence of...
Younger adults (YA) judgments of political candidates’ competence from facial appearance accurately ...
According to numerous studies, candidates’ looks predict voters’ choices—a finding that raises conce...
Abstract Recent research has shown that rapid judgments about the personality traits of political ca...
We estimate the effect of candidate appearance on vote choice in congressional elections using an or...
Recent research has indicated that judgments of competence based on very short exposure to political...
We study the role of beauty in politics using candidate photos that figured prominently in electoral...
Previous research suggests that voting in elections is influenced by appearance-based personality in...
People rely on the facial appearance of political candidates when voting. Here, we examine whether t...
Previous research suggests that voting in elections is influenced by appearance-based personality in...
© 2008 International Society of Political Psychology. Permission to post published version granted b...
In low-information elections, voters are often faced with the task of choosing from a list of unknow...
Recent research has documented that competent-looking political candidates do better in U.S. electio...
Recent research has documented that competent-looking political candidates do better in U.S. electio...
Conventional wisdom, and a growing body of behavioral research, suggests that the nonverbal image of...
Recent research finds that naive survey participants ’ rapid evaluations of the facial competence of...
Younger adults (YA) judgments of political candidates’ competence from facial appearance accurately ...
According to numerous studies, candidates’ looks predict voters’ choices—a finding that raises conce...
Abstract Recent research has shown that rapid judgments about the personality traits of political ca...
We estimate the effect of candidate appearance on vote choice in congressional elections using an or...
Recent research has indicated that judgments of competence based on very short exposure to political...
We study the role of beauty in politics using candidate photos that figured prominently in electoral...
Previous research suggests that voting in elections is influenced by appearance-based personality in...
People rely on the facial appearance of political candidates when voting. Here, we examine whether t...
Previous research suggests that voting in elections is influenced by appearance-based personality in...
© 2008 International Society of Political Psychology. Permission to post published version granted b...
In low-information elections, voters are often faced with the task of choosing from a list of unknow...