Trusting the Looks of Others: Gaze Effects of Faces in Social Settings.

Perception

Department of Basic Psychological Research and Research Methods, University of Vienna, Austria.

Published: August 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Eye gaze is a crucial nonverbal cue in communication, influencing attention, social interest, and evaluations of attractiveness and trustworthiness.
  • In a study with various gaze conditions, faces looking directly at participants were rated higher in both attractiveness and trustworthiness compared to those with averted gaze.
  • The experiments highlighted that judgments about faces depend on the actual gaze direction and social context, rather than memory or just the presence of another person.

Article Abstract

Eye gaze is an important social cue in human communication that serves as a predictor of changes in attention, indicates social interest, and even affects the evaluation of objects that have been looked at. However, it needs to be shown how this strong nonverbal signal affects social and aesthetic evaluations in social settings. In this study, we presented natural scenes with two faces in three gaze conditions showing different directions of gaze. Participants evaluated faces that were looked at or not, that showed direct or averted gaze, for attractiveness (aesthetic) as well as trustworthiness (social). In Experiment 1, faces looking directly at the perceiver were rated as more attractive and as more trustworthy. In Experiment 2, when the direct gaze condition was omitted, faces that were looked at by another face were judged as more trustworthy. In Experiment 3a, participants did not remember the directions of gaze of two faces, demonstrating the dependence of the judgement on the actual situation and excluding a memory explanation. In Experiment 3b, we confirmed that these gaze effects depend on the direction of gaze and not the mere presence of another person. Our findings show how gazing in real world settings affects social and aesthetic evaluations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0301006616643678DOI Listing

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