The Impact of Facial Attractiveness and Affective Person Knowledge on Visual Awareness

Author(s):  
Junchen Shang ◽  
Hong Yang
2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Patcas ◽  
D.A.J. Bernini ◽  
A. Volokitin ◽  
E. Agustsson ◽  
R. Rothe ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
pp. 69-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emanuela Sala ◽  
Marco Terraneo ◽  
Mario Lucchini ◽  
Gundi Knies

2021 ◽  
pp. 174702182110503
Author(s):  
Elena Panagiotopoulou ◽  
Laura Crucianelli ◽  
Alessandra Lemma ◽  
Katerina Fotopoulou

People tend to evaluate their own traits and abilities favourably and such favourable self-perceptions extend to attractiveness. However, the exact mechanism underlying this self-enhancement bias remains unclear. One possibility could be the identification with attractive others through blurring of self-other boundaries. Across two experiments, we used the enfacement illusion to investigate the effect of others’ attractiveness in the multisensory perception of the self. In Experiment 1 (N=35), participants received synchronous or asynchronous interpersonal visuo-tactile stimulation with an attractive and non-attractive face. In Experiment 2 (N=35), two new faces were used and spatial incοngruency was introduced as a control condition. The results showed that increased ratings of attractiveness of an unfamiliar face lead to blurring of self-other boundaries, allowing the identification of our psychological self with another's physical self and, specifically, their face, and this seems to be unrelated to perceived own attractiveness. The effect of facial attractiveness on face ownership showed dissociable mechanisms, with multisensory integration modulating the effect on similarity but not identification, an effect that may be purely based on vision. Overall, our findings suggest that others’ attractiveness may lead to positive distortions of the self. This research provides a psychophysical starting point for studying the impact of others' attractiveness on self-face recognition, which can be particularly important for individuals with malleable, embodied self-other boundaries and body image disturbances.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrycja Delong ◽  
Uta Noppeney

AbstractInformation integration is considered a hallmark of human consciousness. Recent research has challenged this tenet by showing multisensory interactions in the absence of awareness. This psychophysics study assessed the impact of spatial and semantic correspondences on audiovisual binding in the presence and absence of visual awareness by combining forward–backward masking with spatial ventriloquism. Observers were presented with object pictures and synchronous sounds that were spatially and/or semantically congruent or incongruent. On each trial observers located the sound, identified the picture and rated the picture’s visibility. We observed a robust ventriloquist effect for subjectively visible and invisible pictures indicating that pictures that evade our perceptual awareness influence where we perceive sounds. Critically, semantic congruency enhanced these visual biases on perceived sound location only when the picture entered observers’ awareness. Our results demonstrate that crossmodal influences operating from vision to audition and vice versa are interactively controlled by spatial and semantic congruency in the presence of awareness. However, when visual processing is disrupted by masking procedures audiovisual interactions no longer depend on semantic correspondences.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Panagiotopoulou ◽  
Laura Crucianelli ◽  
Alessandra Lemma ◽  
Aikaterini Fotopoulou

People tend to evaluate their own traits and abilities favourably and such favourable self-perceptions extend to attractiveness. However, the exact mechanism underlying this self-enhancement bias remains unclear and one possibility could be the identification with attractive others through blurring of self-other boundaries. Across two experiments, we used the enfacement illusion to investigate the effect of the attractiveness of others in the multisensory perception of the self. In a first experiment (N=35), participants were stroked on the cheek while looking at an attractive vs. non-attractive face being stroked on the cheek in synchrony or asynchrony. In the second experiment (N=35), two new faces were used and spatial incοngruency was introduced as a control condition. The results showed that increased ratings of attractiveness of an unfamiliar face lead to blurring of self-other boundaries, allowing the identification of our psychological self with another's physical self, and specifically their face, and this seems to be unrelated to perceived own attractiveness. The effect of facial attractiveness on face ownership showed dissociable mechanisms, with multisensory integration modulating the effect on similarity but not identification, an effect that may be purely based on vision. Overall, our findings suggest that others’ attractiveness may lead to positive distortions of the self, identifying with the more rather than less attractive others. This research provides a psychophysical starting point for studying the impact of others' attractiveness on how we perceive the self, which can be particularly important for individuals with malleable, embodied self-other boundaries and body image disturbances.


2016 ◽  
Vol 48 (7) ◽  
pp. 770
Author(s):  
Siyun LIU ◽  
Qian ZHOU ◽  
Huibin JIA ◽  
Qingbai ZHAO

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