Saturday, May 02, 2009
6704: Babyface In The Boardroom.
From The Chicago Sun-Times…
Black CEOs better off if they have a baby face
Kellogg School of Management | Study shows youthful features help African Americans in Business
By Mike Thomas
“Baby face, you’ve got the cutest little baby face,” goes the classic lover’s ode.
As it turns out, having an innocent-looking, oh-so-pinchable countenance may be attractive in non-amorous ways as well.
But only if the baby face is black, according to a study spearheaded by Professor Robert Livingston of Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. His findings—titled “The Teddy Bear Effect: Does babyfaceness benefit black CEOs?”—will be published in an upcoming issue of the journal Psychological Science.
Livingston, an assistant professor of management and organizations, and co-author Nicholas Pearce defined “babyfaceness” by the following physical traits: rounder face, larger forehead, smaller nose, larger ears and fuller, pouty lips. They’re all part of what Livingston refers to as “disarming mechanisms.”
“It’s any feature, trait or quality of a person that makes them appear to be less threatening and less hostile, and we believe that’s really critical for black males,” said Livingston, who has studied such areas as social inequality and institutional discrimination for nearly a decade. “Because the default, based on stereotypes in the society, is that many people perceive black males to be hostile and threatening. And so if you have some sort of feature that signals, ‘Hey, you don’t have to be afraid of me,’ or ‘I’m just like you,’ then that makes people feel more comfortable with these individuals in positions of power.”
The study asked non-black men and women to evaluate head-shot photos of 10 black men and 30 white women and men. The 10 blacks all were current or former CEOs of Fortune 500 companies.
Participants rated each photo based on perceived babyfaceness, attractiveness, age and appearance. They were also asked about perceived personality traits, how warm the person seemed and whether he or she would be a competent leader.
Across the board, the black CEOs were thought to be warmer and more baby-faced. In addition, the more baby-faced black CEOs were thought to draw higher salaries. The perceptions turned out to be true: The more baby-faced the CEO, the more prestigious the company he led.
Conversely, past studies have shown that babyfaceness hinders rather than helps white males who aspire to positions of power.
Labels:
black culture,
job market
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2 comments:
Good lord. we all better pudge up to get our pay up.
Mind if I borrow?
Help yourself, pudge.
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