Love at second sight: Sequential dependence of facial attractiveness in an on-line dating paradigm

Judgment 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Social Perception 05 social sciences Visual Perception Humans Female 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Students Facial Recognition Article
DOI: 10.1038/srep22740 Publication Date: 2016-03-17T13:56:37Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractMillions of people use online dating sites each day, scanning through streams of face images in search of an attractive mate. Face images, like most visual stimuli, undergo processes whereby the current percept is altered by exposure to previous visual input. Recent studies using rapid sequences of faces have found that perception of face identity is biased towards recently seen faces, promoting identity-invariance over time and this has been extended to perceived face attractiveness. In this paper we adapt the rapid sequence task to ask a question about mate selection pertinent in the digital age. We designed a binary task mimicking the selection interface currently popular in online dating websites in which observers typically make binary decisions (attractive or unattractive) about each face in a sequence of unfamiliar faces. Our findings show that binary attractiveness decisions are not independent: we are more likely to rate a face as attractive when the preceding face was attractive than when it was unattractive.
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