Relating Facial Trustworthiness to Antisocial Behavior in Adolescent and Adult Men.

IF 1.2 3区 心理学 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL
Journal of Nonverbal Behavior Pub Date : 2023-09-01 Epub Date: 2023-06-15 DOI:10.1007/s10919-023-00432-x
Zoe M Alley, David C R Kerr, John-Paul Wilson, Nicholas O Rule
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Abstract

Here, we investigate how facial trustworthiness-a socially influential appearance variable-interrelates with antisocial behavior across adolescence and middle adulthood. Specifically, adolescents who look untrustworthy may be treated with suspicion, leading to antisocial behavior through expectancy effects. Alternatively, early antisocial behaviors may promote an untrustworthy appearance over time (Dorian Gray effect). We tested these expectancy and Dorian Gray effects in a longitudinal study that followed 206 at-risk boys (90% White) from ages 13-38 years. Parallel process piecewise growth models indicated that facial trustworthiness (assessed from photographs taken prospectively) declined during adolescence and then stabilized in adulthood. Consistent with expectancy effects, initial levels of facial trustworthiness were positively related to increases in antisocial behavior during adolescence and also during adulthood. Additionally, higher initial levels of antisocial behavior predicted relative decreases in facial trustworthiness across adolescence. Adolescent boys' facial appearance may therefore both encourage and reflect antisocial behavior over time.

Abstract Image

青少年和成年男性面部可信度与反社会行为的关系
在这里,我们研究了面部可信度--一种对社会有影响的外貌变量--如何与青春期和成年中期的反社会行为相关联。具体来说,看起来不值得信任的青少年可能会受到怀疑,从而通过预期效应导致反社会行为。另外,早期的反社会行为也可能会随着时间的推移而助长不值得信赖的外表(多里安-格雷效应)。我们在一项纵向研究中对上述预期效应和多里安-格雷效应进行了测试,该研究对 206 名高危男孩(90% 为白人)进行了 13-38 岁的跟踪调查。平行过程片断增长模型表明,面部可信度(通过前瞻性拍摄的照片进行评估)在青春期下降,然后在成年期趋于稳定。与预期效应一致的是,面部可信度的初始水平与青少年时期以及成年期反社会行为的增加呈正相关。此外,反社会行为的初始水平越高,预示着整个青春期面部可信度的相对下降。因此,随着时间的推移,青春期男孩的面部外观既可能鼓励反社会行为,也可能反映出反社会行为。
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来源期刊
Journal of Nonverbal Behavior
Journal of Nonverbal Behavior PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL-
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
9.50%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: Journal of Nonverbal Behavior presents peer-reviewed original theoretical and empirical research on all major areas of nonverbal behavior. Specific topics include paralanguage, proxemics, facial expressions, eye contact, face-to-face interaction, and nonverbal emotional expression, as well as other subjects which contribute to the scientific understanding of nonverbal processes and behavior.
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