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The face of an angel: Effect of exposure to details of moral behavior on facial recognition memory
Authors:Alysha Baker  Leanne ten Brinke  Stephen Porter
Affiliation:1. University of British Columbia – Okanagan, Centre for the Advancement of Psychological Science and Law (CAPSL), Canada;2. UC Berkeley, Haas School of Business, United States
Abstract:The Dangerous Decisions Theory (DDT; Porter & ten Brinke, 2009) posits that instantaneous perceptions of trustworthiness based on a stranger's face influence the manner in which ensuing information about the target is processed. This study tested a bi-directional DDT model, proposing that information concerning a target's moral behavior could distort eyewitness memory for the individual's facial trustworthiness. Participants (N = 141) viewed a target individual's face (previously rated as appearing “neutral” on trustworthiness) and then were exposed to one of the three vignettes describing the target's behavior (either immoral, morally neutral, or altruistic). Following a delay, observers were asked to identify the target individual on a facial morph video (continuously ranging in levels of perceived trustworthiness). Results indicated that behavioral information varying in morality influenced facial recognition memory; specifically, faces were recalled as having less trustworthy features following a disclosure of immoral/criminal behavior.
Keywords:Memory  Biased decision-making  Facial recognition
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