Premium
Turning the other cheek: Facial orientation influences both model attractiveness and product evaluation
Author(s) -
Park Jaewoo,
Spence Charles,
Ishii Hiroaki,
Togawa Taku
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
psychology and marketing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.035
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 1520-6793
pISSN - 0742-6046
DOI - 10.1002/mar.21398
Subject(s) - attractiveness , psychology , perception , cheek , orientation (vector space) , product (mathematics) , cognitive psychology , face (sociological concept) , facial attractiveness , social psychology , sociology , neuroscience , mathematics , anatomy , geometry , medicine , psychoanalysis , social science
The layout of visual elements in advertising influences consumers' perception and judgments. The research reported here investigates the influence of the face orientation of a human model on the perception of their attractiveness and its downstream consequences on product evaluation. Across five experiments, we first demonstrate that consumers tend to perceive a model's face showing his or her left cheek as more attractive than when showing the right cheek, even when the images are otherwise identical. More importantly, we demonstrate the downstream influence of face orientation on the evaluation of advertised products whereby the leftward (vs. rightward) model's face increases the evaluation of the advertised product through perceived model attractiveness. We identify the underlying mechanism of the face orientation effect, namely, that consumers perceive those faces showing their left (vs. right) cheek as more prototypical, and that this perception of prototypicality elicits an aesthetic preference for the model's leftward face which in turn carries over to influence product evaluation. The theoretical and practical implications of this research are also discussed.