When encountering a stranger for the first time, adults spontaneously attribute to them a wide variety of character traits based solely on their physical appearance, most notably from their face. While these trait inferences exert a pervasive influence over our behaviour, their origins remain unclear. Whereas nativist accounts hold that first impressions are a product of gene-based natural selection, the Trait Inference Mapping framework (TIM) posits that we learn face-trait mappings ontogenetically as a result of correlated face-trait experience. Here, we examine the available anthropological evidence on ritual in order to better understand the mechanism by which first impressions from faces are acquired. Consistent with the TIM framework,...
Human rituals exhibit bewildering diversity, from the Mauritian Kavadi to Catholic communion. Is thi...
Faces and bodies spontaneously elicit personality trait judgments (e.g., trustworthy, dominant, lazy...
When we meet a person for the first time, we can gain a wealth of information from perceiving their ...
Humans spontaneously attribute a wide range of traits to strangers based solely on their facial feat...
People have a strong and reliable tendency to infer the character traits of strangers based solely o...
When we encounter a stranger for the first time, we spontaneously attribute to them a wide variety o...
The study of first impressions from faces now emphasizes the need to understand trait inferences mad...
Previous research indicates that first impressions from faces are the products of automatic and rapi...
Abstract The notion that first impressions are somewhat accurate is an intriguing possibility. Sever...
People form first impressions from facial appearance rapidly, and these impressions can have conside...
Personality trait attribution is automatic, and first impressions can be lasting and lead to importa...
Along with a classical immune system, we have evolved a behavioral one that directs us away from pot...
A paradoxical finding from recent studies of face perception is that observers are error-prone and i...
Connectionist modeling experiments tested anomalous-face and baby-face overgeneralization hypotheses...
Appearance is known to influence social interactions, which in turn could potentially influence pers...
Human rituals exhibit bewildering diversity, from the Mauritian Kavadi to Catholic communion. Is thi...
Faces and bodies spontaneously elicit personality trait judgments (e.g., trustworthy, dominant, lazy...
When we meet a person for the first time, we can gain a wealth of information from perceiving their ...
Humans spontaneously attribute a wide range of traits to strangers based solely on their facial feat...
People have a strong and reliable tendency to infer the character traits of strangers based solely o...
When we encounter a stranger for the first time, we spontaneously attribute to them a wide variety o...
The study of first impressions from faces now emphasizes the need to understand trait inferences mad...
Previous research indicates that first impressions from faces are the products of automatic and rapi...
Abstract The notion that first impressions are somewhat accurate is an intriguing possibility. Sever...
People form first impressions from facial appearance rapidly, and these impressions can have conside...
Personality trait attribution is automatic, and first impressions can be lasting and lead to importa...
Along with a classical immune system, we have evolved a behavioral one that directs us away from pot...
A paradoxical finding from recent studies of face perception is that observers are error-prone and i...
Connectionist modeling experiments tested anomalous-face and baby-face overgeneralization hypotheses...
Appearance is known to influence social interactions, which in turn could potentially influence pers...
Human rituals exhibit bewildering diversity, from the Mauritian Kavadi to Catholic communion. Is thi...
Faces and bodies spontaneously elicit personality trait judgments (e.g., trustworthy, dominant, lazy...
When we meet a person for the first time, we can gain a wealth of information from perceiving their ...