Previous research indicates that followers tend to contingently match particular leader qualities to evolutionarily consistent situations requiring collective action (i.e., context-specific cognitive leadership prototypes) and information processing undergoes categorization which ranks certain qualities as first-order context-general and others as second-order context-specific. To further investigate this contingent categorization phenomenon we examined the “attractiveness halo”—a first-order facial cue which significantly biases leadership preferences. While controlling for facial attractiveness, we independently manipulated the underlying facial cues of health and intelligence and then primed participants with four distinct organizational...
While first impressions of dominance and competence can influence leadership preference, social tran...
This paper examines the impact of facial cues on leadership emergence. Using evolutionary social psy...
The present research replicates and extends previous literature on the evolutionary contingency hypo...
Previous research indicates that followers tend to contingently match particular leader qualities to...
Many psychological studies have shown that facial appearance matters in the people we select as lead...
In the absence of political knowledge, voters tend to use facial cues to judge a candidate’s leade...
Social judgments of faces predict important social outcomes, including leadership decisions. Previou...
doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00792 A face for all seasons: searching for context-specific leadership trai...
Social judgments of faces predict important social outcomes, including leadership decisions. Previou...
Knowles, Kristen K. - ORCID 0000-0001-9664-9055 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9664-9055Many researche...
Previous research has shown that people prefer male leaders who show congruency between facial cues ...
Using an evolutionary psychology framework we propose that leadership and followership are evolved t...
Judgments of leadership ability from face images predict the outcomes of actual political elections ...
This paper examines the impact of facial cues on leadership emergence. Using evolutionary social psy...
Facial cues can have context-contingent effects on leadership judgments, with dominant-looking ind...
While first impressions of dominance and competence can influence leadership preference, social tran...
This paper examines the impact of facial cues on leadership emergence. Using evolutionary social psy...
The present research replicates and extends previous literature on the evolutionary contingency hypo...
Previous research indicates that followers tend to contingently match particular leader qualities to...
Many psychological studies have shown that facial appearance matters in the people we select as lead...
In the absence of political knowledge, voters tend to use facial cues to judge a candidate’s leade...
Social judgments of faces predict important social outcomes, including leadership decisions. Previou...
doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00792 A face for all seasons: searching for context-specific leadership trai...
Social judgments of faces predict important social outcomes, including leadership decisions. Previou...
Knowles, Kristen K. - ORCID 0000-0001-9664-9055 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9664-9055Many researche...
Previous research has shown that people prefer male leaders who show congruency between facial cues ...
Using an evolutionary psychology framework we propose that leadership and followership are evolved t...
Judgments of leadership ability from face images predict the outcomes of actual political elections ...
This paper examines the impact of facial cues on leadership emergence. Using evolutionary social psy...
Facial cues can have context-contingent effects on leadership judgments, with dominant-looking ind...
While first impressions of dominance and competence can influence leadership preference, social tran...
This paper examines the impact of facial cues on leadership emergence. Using evolutionary social psy...
The present research replicates and extends previous literature on the evolutionary contingency hypo...