American Behavioral Scientist
2016, Vol. 60(14) 1756–1771
© 2016 SAGE Publications
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DOI: 10.1177/0002764216676249
abs.sagepub.com
Article
Looks That Matter: The Effect
of Physical Attractiveness in
Low- and High-Information
Elections
Azi Lev-On
1
and Israel Waismel-Manor
2
Abstract
Research demonstrates that good looks matter in politics. The global trend today is
toward more visual ballots, which include candidates’ photographs. Because voters are
exposed to a candidate’s appearance right before they vote, physical attractiveness may
be a significant contributor to electoral success. But does appearance matter equally
in high-information elections, where all candidates are well known to voters, and low-
information elections, where voters have little or no knowledge of who the candidates
are? How does enhancing the photos of candidates through software programs affect
their electability? To our knowledge, this article is the first to examine the impact of
candidates’ appearance in high- and low-information elections in the field using two
experiments involving the manipulation of their appearance. Data for the first study
were collected in a low-information election in which a student population was asked
to select from a list of fictitious candidates for city council. In this study, we found that
the candidates’ looks had an impact on the votes they received. Data for the second
study were collected right before a high-information election: A straw poll that took
place immediately before the primaries for a major political party in Israel, involving
party members selecting from a list of real candidates. Here the candidates’ appearance
had no impact on the votes they received, even for the lesser known candidates on the
list. The results indicate that the impact of visual manipulation of candidate images does
influence voters, but is limited by the informational context of the elections.
Keywords
low-information elections, heuristics, physical attractiveness, ballot design, primaries
1
Ariel University, Ariel, Israel
2
University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel
Corresponding Author:
Israel Waismel-Manor, School of Political Science, University of Haifa, 4018 Amadrega, Haifa
3498838, Israel.
Email: wisrael@poli.haifa.ac.il
676249ABS XX X 10.1177/0002764216676249American Behavioral ScientistLev-On and Waismel-Manor
research-article 2016