Previous research indicates that first impressions from faces are the products of automatic and rapid processing and emerge early in development. These features have been taken as evidence that first impressions have a phylogenetic origin. We examine whether first impressions acquired through learning can also possess these features. First, we confirm that adults rate a person as more intelligent when they are wearing glasses (Study 1). Next, we show this inference persists when participants are instructed to ignore the glasses (Study 2) and when viewing time is restricted to 100 ms (Study 3). Finally, we show that 6‐year‐old, but not 4‐year‐old, children perceive individuals wearing glasses to be more intelligent, indicating that the effec...
Faces learnt in a single experimental session elicit a familiarity effect in event-related brain pot...
At first sight of a new person, people quickly form impressions on how attractive, trustworthy, and ...
ABSTRACT—People often draw trait inferences from the facial appearance of other people. We investiga...
Previous research indicates that first impressions from faces are the products of automatic and rapi...
People have a strong and reliable tendency to infer the character traits of strangers based solely o...
Humans spontaneously attribute a wide range of traits to strangers based solely on their facial feat...
First impressions of social traits, such as attractiveness, from faces are often claimed to be made ...
This study asks the question, are first impressions of intelligence inferred automatically from the ...
People form first impressions from facial appearance rapidly, and these impressions can have conside...
When encountering a stranger for the first time, adults spontaneously attribute to them a wide varie...
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...
Existing models of facial first impressions indicate between two and four factors that underpin all ...
Models of first impressions from faces have consistently found two underlying dimensions of trustwor...
Abstract The notion that first impressions are somewhat accurate is an intriguing possibility. Sever...
Faces learnt in a single experimental session elicit a familiarity effect in event-related brain pot...
At first sight of a new person, people quickly form impressions on how attractive, trustworthy, and ...
ABSTRACT—People often draw trait inferences from the facial appearance of other people. We investiga...
Previous research indicates that first impressions from faces are the products of automatic and rapi...
People have a strong and reliable tendency to infer the character traits of strangers based solely o...
Humans spontaneously attribute a wide range of traits to strangers based solely on their facial feat...
First impressions of social traits, such as attractiveness, from faces are often claimed to be made ...
This study asks the question, are first impressions of intelligence inferred automatically from the ...
People form first impressions from facial appearance rapidly, and these impressions can have conside...
When encountering a stranger for the first time, adults spontaneously attribute to them a wide varie...
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...
Existing models of facial first impressions indicate between two and four factors that underpin all ...
Models of first impressions from faces have consistently found two underlying dimensions of trustwor...
Abstract The notion that first impressions are somewhat accurate is an intriguing possibility. Sever...
Faces learnt in a single experimental session elicit a familiarity effect in event-related brain pot...
At first sight of a new person, people quickly form impressions on how attractive, trustworthy, and ...
ABSTRACT—People often draw trait inferences from the facial appearance of other people. We investiga...