A Todorov, M Pakrashi, NN Oosterhof - Social cognition, 2009 - Guilford Press
Previous studies have shown that trustworthiness judgments from facial appearance approximate general valence evaluation of faces (Oosterhof & Todorov, 2008) and are made …
CP Said, N Sebe, A Todorov - Emotion, 2009 - psycnet.apa.org
People make trait inferences based on facial appearance despite little evidence that these inferences accurately reflect personality. The authors tested the hypothesis that these …
JR Dunn, ME Schweitzer - Journal of personality and social …, 2005 - psycnet.apa.org
The authors report results from 5 experiments that describe the influence of emotional states on trust. They found that incidental emotions significantly influence trust in unrelated …
S Porter, L England, M Juodis… - Canadian Journal of …, 2008 - psycnet.apa.org
Bien que les jugements de confiance portés à la vue d'un visage étranger se forment rapidement (Willis & Todorov, 2006), leur exactitude est inconnue. Nous avons étudié …
A Todorov, SG Baron… - Social cognitive and …, 2008 - academic.oup.com
Judgments of trustworthiness from faces determine basic approach/avoidance responses and approximate the valence evaluation of faces that runs across multiple person …
G Buckingham, LM DeBruine, AC Little… - Evolution and Human …, 2006 - Elsevier
Although previous studies of individual differences in preferences for masculinity in male faces have typically emphasized the importance of factors such as changes in levels of sex …
CAM Sutherland, AW Young… - British Journal of …, 2017 - Wiley Online Library
First impressions made to photographs of faces can depend as much on momentary characteristics of the photographed image (within‐person variability) as on consistent …
B Balas, J Pacella - Computers in Human Behavior, 2017 - Elsevier
Computer-generated faces are increasingly prevalent in a range of settings. While the quality of synthetic face appearance has increased dramatically, participants can usually …
M Dzhelyova, DI Perrett, I Jentzsch - Brain research, 2012 - Elsevier
Behavioral and neuroimaging studies suggest that the attribution of trustworthiness to faces relies on emotional and structural cues. Attributions happen spontaneously and very rapidly …