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Research Article

How static facial cues relate to real-world leaders’ success: a review and meta-analysis

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Pages 120-148 | Received 01 Feb 2019, Accepted 18 May 2020, Published online: 07 Jun 2020
 

ABSTRACT

People use facial information to infer others’ leadership potential across numerous domains; but what forms the basis of these judgements and how much do they matter? Here, we quantitatively reviewed the literature on perceptions of leaders from facial cues to better understand the association between physical appearance and leader outcomes. We used standard random-effects meta-analytic techniques to determine how appearance cues relate to leader perceptions and associated constructs. Appearance cues suggesting the presence of qualities often desired in leaders correlated with leader selection and success (MZ-r =.26, 95% CI [.21,.31]). Larger effect sizes emerged for popularity outcomes (i.e., those based on perceptions) than for performance outcomes (i.e., those based on external measures). These data help to explain how people envision leaders and their characteristics, providing potential insights to why they select and follow particular individuals over others.

Notes

1 We did not include tests of interactions between multiple variables.

2 A fixed-effects analysis alternatively showed a positive but smaller effect size: MZ-r =.16, SE =.004, 95% CI [.14,.16].

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