article on why people form opinions on your trustworthiness based on your face in less than a second.

I read an interesting article on the BBC about how people form an impression as to whether someone they meet is trustworthy in less than a second largely based on their face and then on their facial expressions.

This was prompted by the TV show Traitors for those of you who follow it.

I thought this seems particularly relevant to autists who often have facial expressions that seem a bit out of place compared to neurotypicals and who can struggle with eye contact and even fidgeting while talking to someone.

www.bbc.co.uk/.../idt-5543014d-9451-4cbc-a400-8160ced87196

On spotting liars or untrustworthy people:

“We all think that we’re able to spot a lie because we look for signs like sweating, looking away, blushing, fidgeting, or other bodily cues. But the truth is, these cues are incredibly context-dependent and not reliable indicators of deception at all,” he says. 

"Someone could be sweating or looking away simply because they’re nervous, shy, or anxious - not because they’re lying. Often, we misinterpret these signals because we expect them to mean dishonesty, when in reality, they’re just signs of discomfort or emotional arousal in a particular situation." 

The article covers how wrong most people get it, but it is still a subconcious decision made by their mind so isn't really something they have much control over.

I think it does explain why many of us get picked out as different and shunned from social groups unless we mask heavily.

Parents
  • "Someone could be sweating or looking away simply because they’re nervous, shy, or anxious - not because they’re lying.

    I was relieved that this was made explicit.

    I wonder if Cat Burns was invited to participate in the show because she is autistic, or if it was incidental. She looks very cool and collected, yet she said she wasn’t underneath, and she did a bit of hand flapping on the wobbly bridge challenge.  

Reply
  • "Someone could be sweating or looking away simply because they’re nervous, shy, or anxious - not because they’re lying.

    I was relieved that this was made explicit.

    I wonder if Cat Burns was invited to participate in the show because she is autistic, or if it was incidental. She looks very cool and collected, yet she said she wasn’t underneath, and she did a bit of hand flapping on the wobbly bridge challenge.  

Children
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