“…Walker and Vul 16 provided the first empirical support for the cheerleader effect, showing that the phenomenon occurs for both female and male faces, seen in groups of 3 to 16 faces. Carragher, et al 13 were the first to replicate the cheerleader effect, finding that target faces were consistently perceived to be approximately 1.5 -2% more attractive when presented in a group compared to alone, regardless of the spatial position of the target face within the group. Walker and Vul 16 hypothesised that the cheerleader effect was the result of a complex interaction between the way that visual scenes are summarised by the visual system 21,22 , the attractiveness of average faces 8,12 , and the hierarchical structure of visual working memory 23,24 .When presented with a complex visual scene, the human visual system rapidly creates a summary representation of the display, through a process known as ensemble coding 21,22,25,26 .…”