Publication | Open Access
On the Borders of Harmful and Helpful Beauty Biases
30
Citations
93
References
2016
Year
EthnicityBehavioral Decision MakingSocial PsychologyRacial PrejudiceEducationPsychologyPositive BiasesSocial SciencesRaceGender StudiesBiasPrejudiceUnconscious BiasNegative BiasesSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesApplied Social PsychologyBeauty StandardsGender StereotypeSocial BiasHelpful Beauty BiasesAttractiveness-based BiasesSocial BehaviorSocial JudgmentBody ImageInterpersonal AttractionAffect Perception
Research with European Caucasian samples demonstrates that attractiveness-based biases in social evaluation depend on the constellation of the sex of the evaluator and the sex of the target: Whereas people generally show positive biases toward attractive opposite-sex persons, they show less positive or even negative biases toward attractive same-sex persons. By examining these biases both within and between different ethnicities, the current studies provide new evidence for both the generalizability and the specificity of these attractiveness-based social perception biases. Examining within-ethnicity effects, Study 1 is the first to demonstrate that samples from diverse ethnic backgrounds parallel the finding of European Caucasian samples: The advantageous or adverse effects of attractiveness depend on the gender constellation of the evaluator and the evaluated person. Examining between-ethnicity effects, Study 2 found that these attractiveness-based biases emerge almost exclusively toward targets of the evaluator’s own ethnic background; these biases were reduced or eliminated for cross-ethnicity evaluations and interaction intentions. We discuss these findings in light of evolutionary principles and reflect on potential interactions between culture and evolved cognitive mechanisms.
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