Abstract
Although it is often assumed that humans spontaneously respond to the trustworthiness of others' faces, it is still unclear whether responses to facial trust are mandatory or can be modulated by instructions. Considerable scientific interest lies in understanding whether trust processing is mandatory, given the societal consequences of biased trusting behavior. We tested whether neural responses indexing trustworthiness discrimination depended on whether the task involved focusing on facial trustworthiness or not, using a fast periodic visual stimulation electroencephalography oddball paradigm with a neural marker of trustworthiness discrimination at 1 Hz. Participants judged faces on size without any reference to trust, explicitly formed impressions of facial trust, or were given a financial lending context that primed trust, without explicit trust judgement instructions. Significant trustworthiness discrimination responses at 1 Hz were found in all three conditions, demonstrating the robust nature of trustworthiness discrimination at the neural level. Moreover, no effect of task instruction was observed, with Bayesian analyses providing moderate to decisive evidence that task instruction did not affect trustworthiness discrimination. Our finding that visual trustworthiness discrimination is mandatory points to the remarkable spontaneity of trustworthiness processing, providing clues regarding why these often unreliable impressions are ubiquitous.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 17 |
| Number of pages | 24 |
| Journal | Journal of Vision |
| Volume | 22 |
| Issue number | 11 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 4 Oct 2022 |
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Dive into the research topics of 'Trustworthiness perception is mandatory: Task instructions do not modulate fast periodic visual stimulation trustworthiness responses'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 3 Finished
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Tackling facial prejudice
Sutherland, C. (Chief Investigator)
ARC Australian Research Council
1/01/19 → 31/12/21
Project: Research
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Who may judge a book by its cover?
Palermo, R. (Investigator 01), Rhodes, G. (Investigator 02), Sutherland, C. (Investigator 03) & Young, A. (Investigator 04)
ARC Australian Research Council
1/01/17 → 31/12/21
Project: Research
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Why does face identification ability improve during childhood?
Palermo, R. (Investigator 01), Jeffery, L. (Investigator 02) & Duchaine, B. (Investigator 03)
ARC Australian Research Council
1/01/14 → 31/12/17
Project: Research
Research output
- 7 Citations
- 1 Doctoral Thesis
-
Investigating social perception of faces by means of fast periodic visual stimulation with electroencephalography
Swe, D., 2022, (Unpublished)Research output: Thesis › Doctoral Thesis
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