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A thin slice of violence: distinguishing violent from nonviolent sex offenders at a glance
Authors:Tyler F. Stillman  Jon K. Maner  Roy F. Baumeister
Affiliation:1. Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt/Main, Department of Cognitive Psychology, Germany;2. Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Research Center of Marketing and Consumer Science, Belgium;1. School of Psychology, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia;2. Division of Psychology, School of Social and Health Sciences, Abertay University, Dundee, Scotland, United Kingdom;3. Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom
Abstract:A growing body of literature in evolutionary psychology suggests that person perception processes are adaptively tuned. The current investigation tested the hypothesis that people would be able to detect a propensity for violence in other people, based only on a brief glance at their face. Participants estimated the propensity for violence in 87 registered sex offenders after seeing photos of them for 2 s each. Estimated likelihood of violence was significantly related to actual violent history, suggesting that violent tendencies can be accurately inferred from a brief look at a person's face. Cues indicative of high masculinity and high levels of male sex hormones (heavy brow, general facial masculinity, high physical strength, younger age) were related to accurate judgments. Other cues such as facial emotion and good grooming were not associated with an actual history of violence, but nevertheless correlated with raters' judgments. Although there were no sex differences in accuracy, on average women thought targets were more violent than men did. Findings speak to the accuracy and efficiency with which people can detect potential threats to physical well-being.
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