Facial Similarity between Voters and Candidates Causes Influence

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Bailenson, Jeremy N., Iyengar, Shanto, Yee, Nick, Collins, Nathan A.
In: The Public Opinion Quarterly, 72, 2008, 5, p. 935-961
published:
Oxford University Press
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
Physical Description: 935-961
ISSN: 0033-362X
1537-5331
published in: The Public Opinion Quarterly
Language: English
Collection: sid-55-col-jstoras1
JSTOR Arts & Sciences I Archive
Table of Contents

<p>Social science research demonstrates that people are drawn to others perceived as similar. We extend this finding to political candidates by comparing the relative effects of candidate familiarity as well as partisan, issue, gender, and facial similarity on voters' evaluations of candidates. In Experiment 1, during the week of the 2006 Florida gubernatorial race, a national representative sample of voters viewed images of two unfamiliar candidates (Crist and Davis) morphed with either themselves or other voters. Results demonstrated a strong preference for facially similar candidates, despite no conscious awareness of the similarity manipulation. In Experiment 2, one week before the 2004 presidential election, a national representative sample of voters evaluated familiar candidates (Bush and Kerry). Strong partisans were unmoved by the facial similarity manipulation, but weak partisans and independents preferred the candidate with whom their own face had been morphed over the candidate morphed with another voter. In Experiment 3, we compared the effects of policy similarity and facial similarity using a set of prospective 2008 presidential candidates. Even though the effects of party and policy similarity dominated, facial similarity proved a significant cue for unfamiliar candidates. Thus, the evidence across the three studies suggests that even in high-profile elections, voters prefer candidates high in facial similarity, but most strongly with unfamiliar candidates.</p>