Unveiling why race does not affect the mask effect on attractiveness: but gender and expression do.

IF 3.4 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL Cognitive Research-Principles and Implications Pub Date : 2024-02-14 DOI:10.1186/s41235-024-00534-0
Ellie Hewer, Michael B Lewis
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Abstract

Studies show that surgical face masks can have both positive and negative effects on attractiveness. Race has been implicated as a moderator of the size of this mask effect. Here, the moderating effects of expression, race and gender are explored. The mask effect was more positive for males than for females, for neutral faces than for smiling faces, and there were differences between the races. Further, the effect of unmasked attractiveness was partialled out for each image, which removed the race effects, but the gender and expression effects remained. It is suggested that racial differences previously observed in the mask effects are a consequence of differences in attractiveness of the faces sampled from those races. Re-analysis of previous research that showed race effects also demonstrates how they are better explained as attractiveness effects rather than race effects. This explanation can provide order to the different findings observed across the literature.

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揭示为什么种族不会影响面具对吸引力的影响:但性别和表情会。
研究表明,手术面罩对吸引力既有正面影响,也有负面影响。种族被认为是面罩效应大小的调节因素。本文探讨了表情、种族和性别的调节作用。男性的面具效应比女性更积极,中性面孔的面具效应比微笑面孔的面具效应更积极,而且不同种族之间也存在差异。此外,对每幅图像中未掩盖的吸引力的效应进行了部分剔除,从而消除了种族效应,但性别和表情效应依然存在。这表明,以前在面具效应中观察到的种族差异是这些种族的人脸样本吸引力差异的结果。对以前显示种族效应的研究的重新分析也表明,这些效应最好解释为吸引力效应而不是种族效应。这种解释可以为文献中观察到的不同结果提供有序的解释。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
7.30%
发文量
96
审稿时长
25 weeks
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