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Trustworthiness perception at zero acquaintance: Consensus, accuracy, and prejudice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 March 2017

Jean-François Bonnefon
Affiliation:
Toulouse School of Economics, Center for Research in Management, 31015 Toulouse, Francejfbonnefon@gmail.comhttps://sites.google.com/site/jfbonnefon
Astrid Hopfensitz
Affiliation:
Toulouse School of Economics, GREMAQ, 31015 Toulouse, Francehopfensitz@gmail.comhttp://hopfensitz.weebly.com Institute for Advanced Study, 31015 Toulouse, France
Wim De Neys
Affiliation:
LaPsyDE (CNRS Unit 8240), Sorbonne – Paris Descartes University, 75005 Paris, France. wim.de-neys@parisdescartes.frhttp://www.wdeneys.org

Abstract

Research on trustworthiness perception from faces has unfolded in a way that is strikingly reminiscent of Jussim's narrative in his 2012 book. Jussim's analysis warns us against overemphasizing evidence about prejudice over evidence about accuracy, when both are scant; and reminds us to hold all accounts to the same standards, whether they call on societal biases or true signals.

Type
Open Peer Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 

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