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100 _a Graham, Daisy L.
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245 _aMaking a Spectacle of Yourself: The Effect of Glasses and Sunglasses on Face Perception/
260 _bsage
_c2019
300 _aVol 48, Issue 6, 2019: (461-470 p.).
520 _aWe investigated the effect of wearing glasses and sunglasses on the perception of social traits from faces and on face matching. Participants rated images of people wearing no glasses, glasses and sunglasses on three social traits (trustworthiness, competence and attractiveness). Wearing sunglasses reduced ratings of trustworthiness. Participants also performed a matching task (telling whether two images show the same person or not) with pairs of images both wearing no glasses, glasses or sunglasses, and all combinations of eyewear. Incongruent eyewear conditions (e.g., one image wearing glasses and the other wearing sunglasses, etc.) reduced performance. Further analysis comparing performance on congruent and incongruent eyewear trials showed that our effects were driven by match trial performance, where differences in eyewear decreased accuracy. For same-eyewear-condition pairs, performance was poorer for pairs of images both wearing sunglasses than no glasses. Our results extend and update previous research on the effect of eyewear on face perception.
650 _aface perception,
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650 _aunfamiliar faces,
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650 _afirst impressions,
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650 _aglasses,
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650 _asunglasses
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700 _aRitchie, Kay L.
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773 0 _012374
_916462
_dSage,
_tPerception
_x1468-4233
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0301006619844680
942 _2ddc
_cART
999 _c12433
_d12433