Friday, May 20, 2022

Unlike doctors and surgeons, psychologists are more likely to present the left cheek on their professional photographs, perhaps signalling (intuitively) their empathy

Putting your best face forward: Posing biases in psychologists’ online portraits. Ven Yi Hew & Annukka K. Lindell. Laterality. Asymmetries of Brain, Behaviour, and Cognition. May 19 2022. https://doi.org/10.1080/1357650X.2022.2077745

Abstract: When posing for portraits the position you adopt influences perceptions. As the left hemiface (controlled by the emotion-dominant right hemisphere) expresses emotion more intensely, left cheek portraits communicate stronger emotion than right cheek portraits. This phenomenon influences perceptions of both emotional expressivity and professional specialisation: while left cheek portraits emphasise emotion, right cheek portraits appear more scientific. When professionals upload photographs online to promote their services, the cheek shown consequently influences perceptions. Given the importance of empathy in establishing a therapeutic alliance, theoretically psychologists would benefit from choosing left cheek portraits to enhance their perceived emotionality. The present study thus examined psychologists’ posing biases in photographs uploaded to online “Find a Psychologist” resources. Images (N = 1230) of psychologists were drawn from professional “Find a Psychologist” online databases, and coded for gender, portrait type and cheek shown. Results confirmed that psychologists show a left cheek bias, irrespective of gender and across portrait types (upper body, full body). This distinguishes psychologists from doctors and surgeons: past research reports no cheek bias in photos uploaded to “Find a Doctor” websites. The current findings suggest that psychologists may intuitively select left cheek images to enhance the communication of empathy to potential clients.

Keywords: Leftrightemotionpsychologisthemiface

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