It seems that you can decide whether to trust the person


It seems that you can decide whether to trust the person 
It seems likely to decide who we entrust our money instead of their reputation, according to a new study.

Researchers at the University of Warwick in Britain from the College of Business Administration and University College London, along with colleagues at Dartmouth College, United States of America, a series of experiments to see if people made ​​the decision to trust others on the basis of their faces.

They found that people are more likely to invest the money in someone's face and looks generally credible, even when negative information was provided on the reputation of that person, in the journal Public Library of Science One reports.

The use of equipment computer algorithm to generate a set of 20 pairs of faces on opposite ends of the size of the trust. This program modifies the reliability and clear of the object, and change their properties, according to Warwick.

The researchers were able to deal with the features of the experiment unlikeable (those related to the shape of the face), which make a person look trustworthy or untrustworthy. And used these figures to 40 series of games of trust with the participants.