The evolution of cooperation requires some mechanism that reduces the risk of exploitation for cooperative individuals. Recent studies have shown that men with wide faces are anti-social, and they are perceived that way by others. This suggests that people could use facial width to identify anti-social men and thus limit the risk of exploitation. To see if people can make accurate inferences like this, we conducted a two-part experiment. First, males played a sequential social dilemma, and we took photographs of their faces. Second, raters then viewed these photographs and guessed how second movers behaved. Raters achieved significant accuracy by guessing that second movers exhibited reciprocal behaviour. Raters were not able to use the pho...
Facial trustworthiness is thought to underlie social judgements in face perception, though it is unc...
International audienceThere is evidence in the literature that non-verbal physical features are used...
Information conveyed by the face can be used in social encounters to make fast decisions about anot...
The evolution of cooperation requires some mechanism that reduces the risk of exploitation for coope...
Decisions about whom to trust are biased by stable facial traits such as attractiveness, similarity ...
Decisions about whom to trust are biased by stable facial traits such as attractiveness, similarity ...
Male facial width-to-height ratio appears to correlate with antisocial tendencies, such as aggressio...
Male facial width-to-height ratio appears to correlate with antisocial tendencies, such as aggressio...
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 ...
The ability to trust others, including strangers, is a prerequisite for human cooperation. Economica...
Cooperating with individuals whose altruism is not motivated by genuine prosocial emotions could hav...
People evaluate a stranger's trustworthiness from their facial features in a fraction of a second, d...
Facial trustworthiness is thought to underlie social judgements in face perception, though it is unc...
International audienceThere is evidence in the literature that non-verbal physical features are used...
Information conveyed by the face can be used in social encounters to make fast decisions about anot...
The evolution of cooperation requires some mechanism that reduces the risk of exploitation for coope...
Decisions about whom to trust are biased by stable facial traits such as attractiveness, similarity ...
Decisions about whom to trust are biased by stable facial traits such as attractiveness, similarity ...
Male facial width-to-height ratio appears to correlate with antisocial tendencies, such as aggressio...
Male facial width-to-height ratio appears to correlate with antisocial tendencies, such as aggressio...
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 ...
The ability to trust others, including strangers, is a prerequisite for human cooperation. Economica...
Cooperating with individuals whose altruism is not motivated by genuine prosocial emotions could hav...
People evaluate a stranger's trustworthiness from their facial features in a fraction of a second, d...
Facial trustworthiness is thought to underlie social judgements in face perception, though it is unc...
International audienceThere is evidence in the literature that non-verbal physical features are used...
Information conveyed by the face can be used in social encounters to make fast decisions about anot...