The glasses stereotype revisited – Effects of glasses on perception, recognition and impressions of faces

Author(s)
Helmut Leder, Michael Forster, Gernot Gerger
Abstract

In face perception, besides physiognomic changes, accessories like eyeglasses can influence facial appearance. According to
a stereotype, people who wear glasses are more intelligent, but less attractive. In a series of four experiments, we showed how full-rim
and rimless glasses, differing with respect to the amount of face they cover, affect face perception, recognition, distinctiveness, and the
attribution of stereotypes. Eyeglasses generally directed observers’ gaze to the eye regions; rimless glasses made faces appear less
distinctive and resulted in reduced distinctiveness in matching and in recognition tasks. Moreover, the stereotype was confirmed but
depended on the kind of glasses – rimless glasses yielded an increase in perceived trustworthiness, but not a decrease in attractiveness.
Thus, glasses affect how we perceive the faces of the people wearing them and, in accordance with an old stereotype, they can lower
how attractive, but increase how intelligent and trustworthy people wearing them appear. These effects depend on the kind of glasses
worn.

Organisation(s)
Journal
Swiss Journal of Psychology
Volume
70
Pages
211-222
ISSN
1421-0185
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1024/1421-0185/a000059
Publication date
2011
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
501006 Experimental psychology, 501001 General psychology, 501021 Social psychology, 501002 Applied psychology
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/the-glasses-stereotype-revisited--effects-of-glasses-on-perception-recognition-and-impressions-of-faces(2a4e6aba-53af-4a59-86ac-dc391c690806).html