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Health

You Probably Look More Attractive in a Group Than on Your Own

It's been called the "cheerleader effect."
Guille Faingold/Stocksy

When it comes to presenting yourself online—such as your profile pic for Facebook or Tinder— which type of photo do you chose? The selfie you’ve taken after careful consideration of lighting, hair, and maybe makeup? Or the group photo with friends, possibly less styled, but that captures a moment among your peers?

It might come as a surprise that it’s the group photo that will make you look more attractive—a phenomenon known as the “cheerleader effect."

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The effect is real, but perhaps not for the reasons you think. The group shot with friends may indeed communicate that you are sociable and friendly, but this isn't what's making you more attractive. The real explanation boils down to how human brains deal with information.

First popularized by the television series How I Met Your Mother, the character Barney Stinson uses the term "cheerleader effect" to describe a woman appearing attractive when in a group, but not as an individual. His interpretation was typical of American sitcoms, but Barney’s comments are actually supported by research.

In 2003, scientific evidence of the cheerleader effect was published in a paper where, across five studies, both men and women were rated more attractive when presented as part of a group photo compared to a solo photo. The authors, Drew Walker and Edward Vul, presented 130 participants with group photographs containing three female faces or three male faces. Each face was then cropped from the photograph and presented individually.

Participants rated the attractiveness of faces presented in a group and individually. Regardless of gender, attractiveness ratings were higher when people were presented in a group compared to individually. However, this does not mean the bigger the group, the more attractive you are. The authors found that group size, whether 4, 9, or 16 people, had no effect on attractiveness ratings. Basically, a handful of friends is all you need to take advantage of this effect.

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Importantly, studies have shown the cheerleader effect to be reliable. Additional research published in 2015 and one study just this month continue to find a groups’ attractiveness is significantly higher than the attractiveness of an individual group member.

The robustness of the cheerleader effect is best explained by looking at how your brain works, and understanding perception. Humans tend not to process every individual detail they perceive in their environment. Instead of devoting significant attention to all individual characteristics, our brain quickly summarizes the information as a group. Evidence even suggests that our brains may be wired for such categorization.

Grouping perceptual information has a distinct evolutionary advantage, enhancing survival by reducing perceptual load (the burden of interpreting a scene from visual information). This perceptual effect is best demonstrated with the Ebbinghaus Illusion.

In this illusion, the inside circles are identical in size, yet the surrounding information (i.e., surrounding circles) alters our perception. Here, rather than focusing on the individual characteristics of the inside circles, our perception is altered by the group information. This is known as top-down processing, where the whole element is perceived before individual characteristics. This is in contrast to bottom-up processing, where there is progression from the individual characteristics to the whole.

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The same characteristics of this illusion extend to the cheerleader effect. In this effect, rather than attend to individual characteristics, we focus on the group as a whole. Such an effect can even be applied to explain social biases. Social categorization is the process of mentally categorizing individuals into groups based on characteristics such as age, sex, and ethnicity. This quick categorization of social information promotes fast social interactions,

but has some serious and broader consequences.

The evidence suggests that presenting yourself with a group will tend to average out any “unattractive” individual characteristics. So, how can you use this information to your advantage? Well, you can apply this information when selecting a profile picture. Perhaps you’re seeing someone new, and suspect they could be doing a little Facebook research on you.

Select a profile picture of you and a few friends for maximum attractiveness. Bonus: Group pictures can also demonstrate that you’re social. Or maybe you’re heading out to the pub with the goal of meeting someone. In that case, it'll help to bring some “wing” men or women—ideally, a group of four. You might not have agreed with everything Barney Stinson said on How I Met Your Mother, but on the question of the cheerleader effect, he was broadly right.

Evita March is a lecturer of psychology at the Federation University Australia. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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