Halo effect of faces and bodies: Cross-cultural similarities and differences between German and Japanese observers
Halo effect of faces and bodies: Cross-cultural similarities and differences between German and Japanese observersAccording to the halo effect, person perceptions are globally biased by specific traits or characteristics. Attractive people are attributed positive traits like prosociality, health, and dominance. Due to a strong focus on facial stimuli it remains unclear whether this effect can also be found for bodies. Furthermore, most studies involved observers from individualistic cultures. This preregistered study explored the consistency of halo effects for men’s faces and bodies for individualistic and collectivistic observers. Facial photos and 3D body scans of 165 German men were judged separately for attractiveness, prosociality, health, and physical dominance by 123 German and 100 Japanese observers. Results were mostly consistent between both observer groups and revealed strong attractiveness halo effects for faces and bodies, and a physical dominance halo effect for bodies. This study provides new insights on consistent halo effect biases in person perception for faces and bodies for observers with different cultural backgrounds.https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/de/biopers/publications_department/halo-effect-of-faces-and-bodies-cross-cultural-similarities-and-differences-between-german-and-japanese-observers-1https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/@@site-logo/university-of-goettingen-logo.svg
Tobias L. Kordsmeyer, Daniel Freund, Atsushi Ueshima, Kiri Kuroda, Tatsuya Kameda and Lars Penke
Halo effect of faces and bodies: Cross-cultural similarities and differences between German and Japanese observers
Personality Science
According to the halo effect, person perceptions are globally biased by specific traits or characteristics. Attractive people are attributed positive traits like prosociality, health, and dominance. Due to a strong focus on facial stimuli it remains unclear whether this effect can also be found for bodies. Furthermore, most studies involved observers from individualistic cultures. This preregistered study explored the consistency of halo effects for men’s faces and bodies for individualistic and collectivistic observers. Facial photos and 3D body scans of 165 German men were judged separately for attractiveness,
prosociality, health, and physical dominance by 123 German and 100 Japanese observers. Results were mostly consistent between both observer groups and revealed strong attractiveness halo effects for faces and bodies, and a physical dominance halo effect for bodies. This study provides new insights on consistent halo effect biases in person perception for faces and bodies for observers with different cultural backgrounds.