Who do you look like? Evidence of facial stereotypes for male names

被引:0
|
作者
Melissa A. Lea
Robin D. Thomas
Nathan A. Lamkin
Aaron Bell
机构
[1] Millsaps College,Department of Psychology
[2] Miami University,undefined
来源
关键词
Face Recognition; Matching Task; Association Strength; Specific Face; Gray Scale Range;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The present research provides evidence that people use facial prototypes when they encounter different names. In Experiment 1, participants created face exemplars for fifteen common male names, subsets of which were endorsed as good examples by a second set of participants. These most typical faces were morphed to create face-name prototypes. In Experiment 2, participants matched one of the names to each of the prototype faces from Experiment 1. Participants’ matching choices showed convergence in naming the prototypes for many of the names. Experiment 3 utilized these same prototypes in a learning task designed to investigate if the face-name associations revealed in Experiment 2 impacted the learnability of the names. Participants learned face-name pairings that had a higher association (based on frequencies from Experiment 2) faster than pairings with a low association. Results suggest a more direct relationship between faces and names than has been previously proposed.
引用
收藏
页码:901 / 907
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Who do you look like? Evidence of facial stereotypes for male names
    Lea, Melissa A.
    Thomas, Robin D.
    Lamkin, Nathan A.
    Bell, Aaron
    [J]. PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2007, 14 (05) : 901 - 907
  • [2] We Look Like Our Names: The Manifestation of Name Stereotypes in Facial Appearance
    Zwebner, Yonat
    Sellier, Anne-Laure
    Rosenfeld, Nir
    Goldenberg, Jacob
    Mayo, Ruth
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 112 (04) : 527 - 554
  • [3] Do you look like an engineer?
    Williams, Len
    [J]. Engineering and Technology, 2019, 14 (06): : 38 - 39
  • [4] We Look Like Our Names: The Manifestation of Name Stereotypes in Facial Appearance (vol 112, pg 527, 2017)
    Zwebner, Yonat
    Sellier, Anne-Laure
    Rosenfeld, Nir
    Goldenberg, Jacob
    Mayo, Ruth
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 113 (04) : 657 - 657
  • [5] Facial Expression Stereotypes of Male and Female Adults and Children: Do Facial Expression Stereotypes of Adults Apply to Children?
    Zhang, Xiaobin
    Liu, Xiaoqing
    [J]. ARCHIVES OF SEXUAL BEHAVIOR, 2024, 53 (01) : 223 - 233
  • [6] Facial Expression Stereotypes of Male and Female Adults and Children: Do Facial Expression Stereotypes of Adults Apply to Children?
    Xiaobin Zhang
    Xiaoqing Liu
    [J]. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 2024, 53 : 223 - 233
  • [7] Who do you look like? - Gaze-based authentication for workers in VR
    LaRubbio, Karina
    Wright, Jeremiah
    David-John, Brendan
    Enqvist, Andreas
    Jain, Eakta
    [J]. 2022 IEEE CONFERENCE ON VIRTUAL REALITY AND 3D USER INTERFACES ABSTRACTS AND WORKSHOPS (VRW 2022), 2022, : 735 - 736
  • [8] Differential facial resemblance of young children to their parents: who do children look like more?
    Alvergne, Alexandra
    Faurie, Charlotte
    Raymond, Michel
    [J]. EVOLUTION AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2007, 28 (02) : 135 - 144
  • [9] You do not look like a chemist - periodically speaking
    Woodall, Ruth A.
    [J]. ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2012, 244
  • [10] The Woman in the Mirror: How to Stop Confusing What You Look Like With Who You Are
    Parekh, Rebecca J.
    [J]. EATING DISORDERS, 2013, 21 (02) : 175 - 176