2015
DOI: 10.1080/10584609.2015.1050565
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Winning Faces Vary by Ideology: How Nonverbal Source Cues Influence Election and Communication Success in Politics

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Cited by 76 publications
(96 citation statements)
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“…Consistent with the findings presented above, subjects are significantly less likely to vote for the dominant individual in the absence of contextual information, and they are significantly more likely to vote for the dominant candidate in the face of conflict than in its absence. This is in line with a prior study analyzing actual election results, which found that a candidate's appearance in terms of dominance was associated with the number of votes he or she actually received (Laustsen and Petersen 2016). At the same time, and consistent with existing evidence, the analysis of the present data shows that the effects are weaker for vote choice compared to evaluations.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Consistent with the findings presented above, subjects are significantly less likely to vote for the dominant individual in the absence of contextual information, and they are significantly more likely to vote for the dominant candidate in the face of conflict than in its absence. This is in line with a prior study analyzing actual election results, which found that a candidate's appearance in terms of dominance was associated with the number of votes he or she actually received (Laustsen and Petersen 2016). At the same time, and consistent with existing evidence, the analysis of the present data shows that the effects are weaker for vote choice compared to evaluations.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Sixth, as OSTKT previously noted, the fact that political facial stereotypes predict the preferences of voters on one side of the political spectrum but not the other also differentiates them from other kinds of faced‐based social attributions, such as facial competence, which attracts the votes of both conservative and liberal voters (Lenz & Lawson, ; Olivola et al, ), or facial dominance, which some studies have shown is a positive predictor of conservative votes and a negative predictor of liberal votes (e.g., Laustsen & Petersen, ). To the best of our knowledge, there are only two other demonstrations of such an asymmetry (between political parties) within real elections.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“… Laustsen and Petersen (), in one of their studies, also obtained evidence suggesting that people are more likely to select leaders with faces that stereotypically fit their preferred political ideology. However, their stimuli were not the faces of actual politicians (they presented participants with two computerized avatar faces), and the hypothetical “voting” context in their study was unrelated to modern politics (participants were asked to imagine living in a tribe in the jungle and indicated which of the two avatars they would prefer to lead the tribe in trying to solve a particular problem).…”
mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…(student's t-test difference of means, p > .05 13 ; relatively disparaging 14 : East Asian ancestry, 28.8%; non-Asian ancestry, 32.3%) 11 Considerable research investigates the influence of nonverbal cues on people. For examples, see Barisione and Iyengar (2016); Laustsen and Petersen (2016); and Olivola, Tingley, and Todorov (2018). 12 See Appendix S2 in the online supporting information for a discussion of the manipulation checks on this experiment.…”
Section: Disparagement Judgmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%