ORCID
- Mileva, Mila: 0000-0003-0537-9702
Abstract
Models of social evaluation aim to capture the information people use to form first impressions of unfamiliar others. However, little is currently known about the relationship between perceived traits across gender. In Study 1, we asked viewers to provide ratings of key social dimensions (dominance, trustworthiness, etc.) for multiple images of 40 unfamiliar identities. We observed clear sex differences in the perception of dominance—with negative evaluations of high dominance in unfamiliar females but not males. In Study 2, we used the social evaluation context to investigate the key predictions about the importance of pictorial information in familiar and unfamiliar face processing. We compared the consistency of ratings attributed to different images of the same identities and demonstrated that ratings of images depicting the same familiar identity are more tightly clustered than those of unfamiliar identities. Such results imply a shift from image rating to person rating with increased familiarity, a finding which generalises results previously observed in studies of identification.
DOI
10.1177/0301006619848996
Publication Date
2019-06-01
Publication Title
Perception
Volume
48
Issue
6
ISSN
0301-0066
Organisational Unit
School of Psychology
First Page
471
Last Page
486
Recommended Citation
Mileva, M., Kramer, R., & Burton, A. (2019) 'Social Evaluation of Faces Across Gender and Familiarity', Perception, 48(6), pp. 471-486. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/0301006619848996