Article

Consistent Facial Cues to Social Class Across Two Different Western Contexts

Details

Citation

Bjornsdottir RT, Morgan M, Hjördísar Jónsdóttir HL, Garðarsdóttir RB & Rule NO (2025) Consistent Facial Cues to Social Class Across Two Different Western Contexts. European Journal of Social Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.3163

Abstract
Individuals form impressions of others’ social-class standing from nonverbal information, including facial appearance. Whether the facial cues relating to (perceptions of) social class generalize across different contexts and class measures (e.g., income, subjective status) remains unknown. We tested which facial cues relate to actual and perceived social class using multiple social-class measures in two contexts: Canada (using contemporary lab-based photos) and Iceland (using mid-20th-century yearbook photos). Results show that facial appearance reveals and predicts impressions of social class broadly (vs. only for specific measures). Greater facial Attractiveness (attractiveness/competence/health) and Positivity (affect/warmth) related to higher social-class standing in both contexts, suggesting that social class influences facial appearance similarly in different environments. Attractiveness also primarily explained social-class perceptions. Validity and utilization of other cues, however, differed between contexts, and we observed perception accuracy only for Canadian targets. These findings provide a more complete understanding of accuracy and bias in perceiving social class.

Keywords
context; first impressions; person perception; social class; socioeconomic status

StatusEarly Online
FundersSocial Sciences and Humanities Research Council and Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Publication date online31/03/2025
Date accepted by journal04/03/2025
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/36942
ISSN0046-2772
eISSN1099-0992