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Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

Looks don't necessarily decide success

By Ke Han (China Daily) Updated: 2015-08-12 14:28

Looks don't necessarily decide success

A patient about to undergo plastic surgery in Seoul, South Korea. [Photo/Xinhua]

More and more people are opting for plastic surgery. Even many students, many of them in senior middle school, are opting for it after appearing for the college entrance examination, because they believe by “improving” their appearance they can increase their competitiveness in the job market.

Experts and the media always warn youngsters who choose to undergo plastic surgery to be cautious and emphasize the importance of inner beauty, or the mind and soul. But many psychological experiments seem to support the assumption that “good-looking people are more likely to succeed than people with average looks”. People believe it is easier for “good-looking” people to get help, higher salaries, promotions and praise.

Evolutionary psychologists tend to interpret this as the eternal competition of “good genes”. Other researches say people generally suppose good-looking people are nicer, sincerer and smarter than “ordinary-looking” people.

A study by the University of British Columbia, Canada, shows people tend to overestimate the competence of good-looking people. In a job interview, if a candidate is good looking, many employers tend to assume he/she will be good at execution. And according to a London School of Economics and Political Science study, “good-looking” men’s average IQ is 13.6 higher than that of “ordinary men” and “beautiful” women’s average IQ is 11.4 higher than “plain Janes” — and the result is not influenced by factors such as family background or health condition.

Despite this, we cannot conclude that good looks decide everything and that inner beauty is useless.

First, “getting more help” doesn’t equal “success”. A several decades old tracing study in the US has recorded a group of people’s family backgrounds, mental and physical health, intimate relationships, relationships with offspring, and incomes from their college period till their old age. Its results show a successful and happy life has nothing to do with status or fortune, but has something to do with “whether you love or are loved”. In other words, it is not a good job or good review that decides whether you have a good life or not.

Second, besides “primacy effect”, “recency effect” also plays a role in influencing people’s judgment. The first impression reflects primacy effect in social interaction, which has a significant impact on people’s judgment. In recency effect, people tend to make judgments on the latest information they get. The two effects exist together, which means a person has countless chances to revise his/her impression after the first impression.

Third, interpersonal attraction doesn't rely only on good looks. A study found that people generally suppose those with larger height-width ratio faces are more reliable. Another study found the authoritativeness of CEOs’ appearance is positively correlated with their companies’ performance.

All these researches show that in the complicated human social system, people are not judged only by their appearance, instead they have more opportunities to make their lives better.

The author is a PhD candidate in psychology in Britain and the co-founder of online psychology organization yosumn.

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