Washington - People make complex judgments about a person just by looking at their face that are based on a range of factors beyond simply their race and gender, a new study has revealed.
The findings have questioned a long-held belief that people immediately put a person they meet into a limited number of social categories such as, female or male; Asian, Black, Latino or White; and young or old.
Dr Kimberly Quinn at the University of Birmingham found that people “see†faces in a multiple of ways. This could have wider importance in understanding stereotyping and discrimination because it has implications on whether and how people categories other people.
Categorization is not done purely on the physical features of the face in front of us, but depends on other information as well, including whether that person is already known and whether the person is believed to share other important identities with us.
“How we perceive faces is not just a reflection of what’s in those faces,†Quinn said.
“We are not objective; we bring our current goals and past knowledge to every new encounter. And this happens really quickly - within a couple of hundred milliseconds of seeing the face,†she said.
Quinn and her colleagues had explored social categories such as sex, race and age; physical attributes such as attractiveness; personality traits such as trustworthiness; and emotional states such as anger, sadness and happiness.
She found that although social categories are used to gather information on faces, these could be easily undermined.
This research found that people reject simple stereotypes when something about the situation alerts them to the fact the stereotype does not tell the whole story.
If people take, for example, a racial group and the corresponding stereotype of members of that group as unintelligent, seeing a person in that group playing an intellectual game such as chess would tell us to cancel out the stereotype.
In order to investigate the causes, mechanisms, and results of social categorization, Quinn used techniques from cognitive psychology and neuroscience to investigate how people processed faces.
The research was designed to provide insight into when and why people categorize other people according to social group membership.
Their findings differed from previous research that adopted a “dual process†approach and assumed people initially categorised faces based on factors such as gender, race or age before determining whether to stereotype them or to see them as unique individuals.
Quinn’s findings were more consistent with a single process that initially focused on “coarse†information that is easy to detect, and then immediately starts to include more fine-grained processing as time elapses.
This model allows for either categorization or more individuated processing to emerge, and does not assume that categorization always comes before recognizing unique identities – thereby allowing for more diverse outcomes than had been previously thought.