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Brain judges attractiveness within a tenth of a second
Posted on Wednesday, August 23, 2006 (EST)
All human kind may not have been blessed with a face good enough to launch a thousand ships, but a new research has found that our brains decide whether a person is attractive and trustworthy within a tenth of a second.
 
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London, Aug 23: All human kind may not have been blessed with a face good enough to launch a thousand ships, but a new research has found that our brains decide whether a person is attractive and trustworthy within a tenth of a second.

Princeton University psychologist Alex Todorov has found that people respond intuitively to faces so rapidly that our reasoning minds may not have time to influence the reaction -- and that our intuitions about attraction and trust are among those we form the fastest.

"The link between facial features and character may be tenuous at best, but that doesn't stop our minds from sizing other people up at a glance," said Todorov.

"We decide very quickly whether a person possesses many of the traits we feel are important, such as likeability and competence, even though we have not exchanged a single word with them. It appears that we are hard-wired to draw these inferences in a fast, unreflective way," he added

Todorov and co-author Janine Willis, a student researcher who graduated from Princeton in 2005, used timed experiments and found that snap judgments on character are often formed with insufficient time for rational thought. They published their research in the July issue of the journal Psychological Science.

Why the brain makes such snap judgments is not yet entirely clear, Todorov said. However, he often works with a sophisticated technological tool for probing brain activity called a functional magnetic resonance imager (fMRI), and Todorov said some of his general research suggests that the part of the brain that responds directly to fear may be involved in judgments of trustworthiness. (ANI)

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