Hair and social aspects

  • I am writing a research proposal on nonverbal communication. Specifically I need scholarly or research articles on how hair is percieved, different hair styles, different hair colors. How the way you wear your hair can communicate to others. I need full text articles, can you find me at least 3-6 or more? I need an answer by Oct 17,Monday night,the latest, so if it's not answered by then, it will be of no use to me. Thank you.


  • Hi Linzie, ?Hair also has social implications. It helps us determine age, economic, intellectual, and marital status, as well as religious affiliations. Hairstyles can signify conformity, for example, to army regulations, monastic celibacy, or any group-determined aesthetic. Hairstyles can also signify rebellion.? http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3687/is_199601/ai_n8755982 ?Cultural definitions of feminine beauty vary with regard to body size, skin complexion, hair length and color, and the use of adornments. Although intrasocietal standards change over time, there is usually a consensus as to what is in vogue. Observers' ratings of attractiveness are quite reliable (Cross & Cross, 1971; Hatfield & Sprecher, 1986). Concluding that Western ideals for female body shape have fluctuated between full and slender figures, Mazur (1986) also points to the rise of mass media as producing more homogeneous standards of beauty.? http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2294/is_n1-2_v29/ai_14526341 ?So, according to Hollywood, all blondes are dumb, shallow, and intimidating. But when it comes down to it, blondes do not fit this stereotype any more than anyone else. Perhaps we could say that everyone else is shallow, to make such a judgment of someone?s character based solely on the color of their hair. Only because they are blonde must blondes disprove the unbecoming stereotypes put upon them by society in order to be viewed by others not as mindless sex objects, but as thinking, feeling, people. (You need to add a paragraph about what blondes really are, using positive aspects. It seems to me you focused soley on what blondes are not and I'm not sure that was your initial intention)? http://calper.la.psu.edu/cmc/wikis/englishcomp/ingestion/AnotherDumbBlonde ?This study was a replication of a previous study, ?First Impressions and Hair Impressions: An Investigation of Impact of Hairstyle on First Impressions? conducted by Dr. Marianne LaFrance (2000) of Yale University. This replication was designed to gain substantial information to see if professors tend to stereotype students with specific hairstyles in the classroom.? http://www.anselm.edu/internet/psych/theses/seniors2002/donadio/ ?On the other hand, is the blonde preference cross-racial? Is it part of a "peacock" effect where humans have no natural speed limit but gorge their eyes on golden hair if possible? I am not so sure about this. I would like to see data on whether isolated tribal people prefer blondes to non-blondes. I read in Journal of Ethnic Studies years ago that though Asian people admired the light skin of Europeans, they were less impressed by blonde hair and blue eyes [1]. In fact, the people of east Asia often portrayed people with red hair and green eyes as witches and trolls (European hair is as red as Chinese skin is yellow remember).? http://www.gnxp.com/MT2/archives/000246.html ??Is graying ever not premature to its victims?? (Hill 102) Gray hair has become more than just a sign of aging these days but by 1984, people with gray hair were seen as victims assaulted unwittingly by terrible signs of aging. How then would a woman who read Susan Brownmiller?s book entitled Femininity feel that she should retaliate against aging?by fighting back with a hair care product?? http://www.uweb.ucsb.edu/~cherie_rice/haircolorads&aging.html ? A trial is a onetime, costly experience for a client, and every factor that jurors will notice, from the color of the attorneys ties to the hairstyles of potential witnesses must be considered as contributing to the overall perception jurors will have of a case. A question we hear frequently is, Will involving women or minority counsel in a trial be an advantage or a disadvantage for my case? There is really no easy way to assess the potential impact of these extralegal factors, such as the race or gender of the attorney, on the jury. It may appear simple at first glance: we assume that having a legal team that reflects the diversity of a community will likely be an asset in a case, or that matching case type and lawyer characteristics would be wise (for example, having an African-American lawyer defend a race discrimination case, or a female attorney defend a sex-discrimination case). As we will discuss, a juror?s identification with counsel, or projection that counsel will have a special understanding or sensitivity to a type of case, can be a powerful factor in persuading that juror to hear your side of the case. However, it is not a simple process to understand how an African-American lawyer will be perceived by a predominantly African-American jury panel as he or she defends a large corporation in a sexual harassment case, or to predict how a female attorney representing a small company will be viewed in a race discrimination case. The key in evaluating potential jury perceptions is to evaluate the context in which these factors are considered, in particular, the interaction between jury make-up and expectations, case type and trial team make-up and behavior.? http://www.decisionquest.com/site/dqlib13.htm ?Do you prefer Farrah Fawcett's feathered hair? Or Jennifer Aniston's do? According to a new study, most of us carry a torch for images that were popular when we were in our early 20s, no matter how old we are. Morris Holbrook, a professor of marketing at Columbia University in New York, and Robert Schindler, a business professor at Rutgers University in New Jersey, examined consumer nostalgia--defined as a preference for products and images that were popular in the past but can no longer be easily obtained.? http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1175/is_5_37/ai_n6213969 ?Agents. The agents (see Figure 1) were designed and previously validated to represent 4 different factors (gender: male, female; age: older (~45 years), younger (~25 years); attractiveness: attractive, unattractive; and ?coolness:? cool, uncool). Attractiveness was operationalized to include only the agent?s facial features, whereas ?coolness? included the agent?s type of clothing and hairstyle. For example, both of the young attractive female agents have identical faces, but differ in ?coolness? by their dress and hairstyle. The agents were created in Poser3D. One male and one female voice were recorded for all the agents using the same script. The audio files were synchronized with the agents using Mimic2Pro. A single series of gestures was added to the agents to complete the agent animation process. A fully integrated environment was created using Flash MX Professional 2004, which allowed for a web browser presentation.? Pages 3-5 http://ritl.fsu.edu/papers/weng_aied_final.pdf ?Hairstyles and Attitudes - As interesting as this news might seem, it pales in comparison to research conducted by the Gender Communications Laboratory at Yale University on the subject of hairstyles and first impressions. Commissioned by Proctor & Gamble, the 2003 Yale study used women and men of diverse ethnic and cultural backgrounds to test the cause and effect relationship between "bad hair" and negative psychological consequences. Yale's findings: 1) Men who wear their hair short and flipped up in front, a la Matt LeBlanc, are perceived by others as confident, sexy, and self-centered. 2) Men with medium-length hair parted on the side are thought of as intelligent, affluent, and narrow-minded. Great for the job interview, bad if you're a civil liberties activist. 3) Long-haired Fabio types are received as least intelligent but most good-natured. Bears of very little brain, as Winnie the Pooh might say.?http://www.menessentials.com/oxid.php/sid/x/shp/oxbaseshop/cl/info/tpl/metrosexual_science.tpl ?Can women have it all? ? It appears that this is not the case, as the study showed that any hairstyle (relative to base) increases a woman?s perceived sexiness, but decreases a woman?s perceived intelligence. We wonder how stereotypes start. Short tresses = successes ? Women wearing short, tousled hairstyles (think Meg Ryan and Charlize Theron) are seen as the most confident and outgoing, an asset when meeting new people or starting a career. Does length matter? ? It is no surprise that women with long, straight, blonde hairstyles, like Gwyneth Paltrow and Christina Aguilera, are perceived as the sexiest and most affluent. By contrast, women with medium-length, casual-looking hairstyles, like Liv Tyler or Sandra Bullock, are viewed as more intelligent and good-natured.? http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:INaDKtV4gNgJ:www.visual-makeover.com/hairstyle-advice/2005/09/06/a-new-hairstyle-will-change-more-than-your-looks/+hairstyles+%2B+psychology&hl=en Race and Hair ============== ?The style of hair has also shown to be exceedingly important. In an article merely labeled ?Last but not least? and appearing in Perception in 2003, one face was duplicated so that there were three identical copies and then different hairstyles, indicating three distinct racial identities, were added to each copy. Surprisingly, these different racially identifiable hairstyles were enough to sway subjects? identification of the race to which each (identical) face belonged. The presence of this racial marker is further evidence that facial features alone do not determine identification of race.? http://dscholarship.lib.fsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1031&context=undergrad ?That is, in the same way that we associate skin color, eye color, or nose shape with particular races or ethnic groups, we also maintain beliefs about the dialects, aesthetics, and mannerisms that signal one?s race or ethnic status. For example, many people associate a certain accent with Italian Americans and, based on this voluntary marker,84 can identify the race or ethnicity of the speaker without difficulty. Similarly, many people recognize that all-braided hairstyles and dreadlocks are part of the cultural legacy of blacks and may assume that a person wearing one of these hairstyles is African American or of West Indian ancestry. These generalizations extend to clothing as well. Saris, bindis and pashminas are associated with Southeast Asian women, despite the fact that these items have been remarketed by the American fashion industry for the women generally.? http://www.law.nyu.edu/journals/lawreview/issues/vol79/no4/NYU402.pdf http://www.perceptionweb.com/perc0203/p5046.pdf http://www.jsonline.com/bym/career/apr05/319828.asp http://www.berkeleyrep.org/HTML/Season0304/YM_programnotes.html A red head?s opinion: http://www.whizkidtech.redprince.net/redheads/ Additional Articles ==================== http://serendip.brynmawr.edu/sci_cult/courses/beauty/web4/amartin.html http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/154/12/1636 http://www.bookrags.com/history/popculture/hairstyles-bbbb-01/ http://www.levity.com/markdery/ewen.html http://barneygrant.tripod.com/p-erceptions.htm http://www.mongoliatoday.com/issue/8/haircut.html http://www.seniorwomen.com/hfs/hf_beauty.html http://www.vikinganswerlady.com/hairstyl.htm http://www.garfield.library.upenn.edu/essays/v5p652y1981-82.pdf http://www.acidlogic.com/uber_blondes.htm http://www2.uiah.fi/projects/metodi/155.htm http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,56219,00.html http://jrscience.wcp.muohio.edu/nsfall99/labpacketArticles/DraftII.Societysdefinitio.html http://www.jyi.org/volumes/volume6/issue6/features/feng.html http://www.tribalarts.com/feature/lawal/ A book that may interest you: http://www.holtzbrinckpublishers.com/academic/book/BookDisplay.asp?BookKey=1879996 ?A large body of research has found that we perceive faces that are closer to the average as more beautiful than distinctive faces. We?ve written about one such study here, but even more surprisingly other experiments have found that the pictures rated most beautiful are computer composites of several different faces, a true ?average? face. But an average face in Bangkok is different from one in Nairobi, which is again different from the average face in Kansas City. There is no one ?average? face ? it depends on what faces you?re averaging together. Perhaps we actually arrive at a conception of beauty simply by averaging together the faces we see around us ? maybe we don?t have an innate sense of beauty, but instead learn it from our environment.? http://cognitivedaily.com/?p=86 You MAY be able to access these articles from a library: ======================================================== Powell, Margaret K. (Margaret Ketchum), 1947- Roach, Joseph R., 1947- Big Hair Subjects: Hairstyles -- Great Britain -- History -- 18th century. Hair -- Social aspects -- Great Britain -- History -- 18th century. Great Britain -- Social life and customs -- 18th century. Abstract: With regard to hair in the fashionable performance of everyday life during much of the eighteenth century, size mattered. Looking particularly at the Augustan theatrical periwig and the rage for "making a head" in the 1760s and 70s, as documented by Horace Walpole and his contemporaries in words and images, we examine the dialectic of conformity and novelty that produced some of the most extravagant uses of human hair and its falsifying substitutes in history, quoted but not surpassed by the bouffant craze of the 1950s and 60s. What anthropologists call "social hair," as the part of the body that can be most readily and flexibly shaped, vividly signifies performance in publicly defined roles, at no time more informatively than when it is at its biggest. http://muse.jhu.edu/cgi-bin/access.cgi?uri=/journals/eighteenth-century_studies/v038/38.1powell.pdf&session=50121231 ?A person's gender plays a role in the emotion children attribute to that person, even given unambiguous cues to a basic emotion. Eighty preschoolers (4 or 5 years of age) were asked to name the emotion of either a boy (Judd) or a girl (Suzy) in otherwise identical stories about prototypical emotional events and, separately, as shown with identical prototypical facial expressions. Boys more often labeled Judd than Suzy as disgusted, both in the disgust story and with the disgust face. There was also a trend for girls to label Suzy as afraid more often than Judd, both in the fear story and with the fear face.? http://muse.jhu.edu/cgi-bin/access.cgi?uri=/journals/merrill-palmer_quarterly/v048/48.3widen.html&session=50121231 ?Abstract The present archival study examined the depiction of women's beauty in our society with respect to hair color, especially blondeness. Raters reliably categorized the hair color of cover models for two women's magazines (Ladies Home Journal and Vogue) and for Playboy magazine centerfolds from the 1950s through the 1980s. These media images from 750 observations were compared among magazines, among decades, and in relation to the proportion of blondes in a normative sample of adult White women. Results revealed that the percentage of blondes in each magazine exceeded the base rate of blondes in the norm group. Blondes were more prevalent in Playboy centerfolds than in the women's magazines. Although temporal patterns varied from magazine to magazine, the average proportion of blondes was lowest in the 1960s and highest in the 1970s. The study's findings have numerous implications for social issues and research regarding the psychology of physical appearance. The authors wish to thank Jill Grant for her assistance in conducting this research.? http://www.springerlink.com/(5jtd2t45y4415tuwnbhygfyq)/app/home/contribution.asp?referrer=parent&backto=issue,7,9;journal,42,225;linkingpublicationresults,1:401600,1 I hope this has helped you. I will be happy to clarify anything in this answer, before you rate. Simpy request an Answer Clarification, and I will respond as soon as possible. Regards, Crabcakes Search Terms ============= social implications + hairstyles perception + blonde + brunette + hairstyles blondes perceived + society perception of beauty







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