They say you shouldn't judge a book by its cover — but most of us do anyway.
The question is: When it comes to judging people by their looks, are those assumptions accurate?
A number of researchers have looked at how we determine
people's trustworthiness based only on their face, and come up with
different verdicts. Some scientists say it's possible to draw accurate conclusions; others say it's not.
A new study
suggests that, yes, it's possible to predict honest or dishonest
behavior just by looking at someone's face — but the reason why might
surprise you.
According to the study, we internalize other's
expectations of us. So after years of being perceived as trustworthy, we
come to act and look like an honest person. Likewise, after a lifetime
of being perceived as untrustworthy, we come to act and look dishonest.
To test this phenomenon, researchers at Columbia
University designed an experiment with multiple steps. First, they took
photographs of 90 MBA students and had 30 independent raters judge
whether each one looked trustworthy.
Then the researchers invited those 90 MBA students to play
a two-person card game in which they could either act honest or
dishonest in the interest of earning points. Each student reported how
often they thought their partner in the game would trust them.
Here's how the card game worked: Participants would draw
one card, labeled either "high" or "low," and had to either lie to their
partner or tell the truth about whether they'd picked a high or low
card.
For the next two to three minutes, each partner tried to
convince the other that they were trustworthy, and each partner had to
judge whether the other was telling the truth. Once those judgments were
in, both partners revealed whether they'd lied and whether they thought
their partner had been lying.
If you told the truth and your partner trusted you, you
earned 10 points; if you lied and your partner trusted you, you earned
20 points; if your partner didn't trust you, you earned nothing.
Likewise, if you trusted an honest partner, you earned 10
points; if you trusted a dishonest partner, you lost 20 points, and if
you didn't trust your partner, you earned nothing.
As it turns out, the part of the experiment in which
participants indicated how often they thought they'd be trusted was key
in differentiating this study from others.
The researchers found that raters' judgments of whether
participants looked trustworthy determined those participants'
expectations of whether they'd be trusted, which in turn determined
whether they behaved in an honest way.
The researchers write: Participants "seemed
to have an awareness of how people would judge them, and they
internalized these expectations and behaved in accordance with them."
When you're the person judging, it's best to give your
partner the benefit of the doubt. Otherwise, you could be inadvertently
giving them a reason to act dishonest, in line with your expectations.
"When you're in the role of evaluating someone else, you
may want to send a clear signal yourself: that you hope and expect that
person will act in a trustworthy way," one of the study authors said in a release.
On the other hand, when you're the person being judged, it's important to give your partner other information to go on.
In the release, the study authors give the example of
creating a profile on a dating site — if you don't include details about
yourself beyond your photo, people will be inclined to judge a book by
its cover and quickly deduce that you're trustworthy or untrustworthy
based on your face.
Overall, these findings add some nuance to the idea that
we're either right or wrong when we assess people's trustworthiness. We
may often be right — but those judgments may also play a role in
influencing the way others look and act toward us.
Post a Comment