The ability to recognize the faces of potential cooperators and cheaters is fundamental to social exchanges, given that cooperation for mutual benefit is expected. Studies addressing biases in face recognition have so far proved inconclusive, with reports of biases towards faces of cheaters, biases towards faces of cooperators, or no biases at all. This study attempts to uncover possible causes underlying such discrepancies. = 174). An enhanced recognition of faces tagged with prosocial descriptors was observed when the encoding scenario involved financial transactions and the rules of the social contract were not explicit (experiments 1 and 2). Such bias was eliminated or attenuated by making participants explicitly aware of “cooperative”,...
Although cooperation can lead to mutually beneficial outcomes, cooperative actions only pay off for ...
People readily ascribe personality traits to others and believe that faces hold important guides to ...
What information is most salient during social exchange? Our studies assess the relative importance ...
BACKGROUND: The ability to recognize the faces of potential cooperators and cheaters is fundamental ...
Background: The ability to recognize the faces of potential cooperators and cheaters is fundamental ...
Face recognition has previously been used to provide evidence for the existence of human cheater det...
Evolutionary psychology assumes that humans evolved specialized cognitive mechanisms in response to ...
Our visual system is remarkably good at extracting socially relevant information from faces (e.g., t...
The evolved architecture of the human brain is argued to contain algorithms to deal with human socia...
The present study sought to determine whether contextual information available when viewing social i...
The presence of multiple faces during a crime may provide a naturally-occurring contextual cue to su...
The presence of multiple faces during a crime may provide a naturally-occurring contextual cue to su...
Contains fulltext : 133506.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Using a composi...
Evolutionary psychology assumes that humans evolved specialized cognitive mechanisms in response to ...
In this review, we ask how looking at people’s faces can influence prosocial behaviors toward them. ...
Although cooperation can lead to mutually beneficial outcomes, cooperative actions only pay off for ...
People readily ascribe personality traits to others and believe that faces hold important guides to ...
What information is most salient during social exchange? Our studies assess the relative importance ...
BACKGROUND: The ability to recognize the faces of potential cooperators and cheaters is fundamental ...
Background: The ability to recognize the faces of potential cooperators and cheaters is fundamental ...
Face recognition has previously been used to provide evidence for the existence of human cheater det...
Evolutionary psychology assumes that humans evolved specialized cognitive mechanisms in response to ...
Our visual system is remarkably good at extracting socially relevant information from faces (e.g., t...
The evolved architecture of the human brain is argued to contain algorithms to deal with human socia...
The present study sought to determine whether contextual information available when viewing social i...
The presence of multiple faces during a crime may provide a naturally-occurring contextual cue to su...
The presence of multiple faces during a crime may provide a naturally-occurring contextual cue to su...
Contains fulltext : 133506.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Using a composi...
Evolutionary psychology assumes that humans evolved specialized cognitive mechanisms in response to ...
In this review, we ask how looking at people’s faces can influence prosocial behaviors toward them. ...
Although cooperation can lead to mutually beneficial outcomes, cooperative actions only pay off for ...
People readily ascribe personality traits to others and believe that faces hold important guides to ...
What information is most salient during social exchange? Our studies assess the relative importance ...