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The Self in the Mind’s Eye: Revealing How We Truly See Ourselves Through Reverse Correlation

Citation: Maister, Lara and De Beukelaer, Sophie and Longo, Matthew R. and Tsakiris, Manos (2021) The Self in the Mind’s Eye: Revealing How We Truly See Ourselves Through Reverse Correlation. Psychological Science, 32 (12). pp. 1965-1978. ISSN 0956-7976

Maister et al.pdf

Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

Is there a way to visually depict the image people “see” of themselves in their minds’ eyes? And if so, what can these mental images tell us about ourselves? We used a computational reverse-correlation technique to explore individuals’ mental “self-portraits” of their faces and body shapes in an unbiased, data-driven way (total N = 116 adults). Self-portraits were similar to individuals’ real faces but, importantly, also contained clues to each person’s self-reported personality traits, which were reliably detected by external observers. Furthermore, people with higher social self-esteem produced more true-to-life self-portraits. Unlike face portraits, body portraits had negligible relationships with individuals’ actual body shape, but as with faces, they were influenced by people’s beliefs and emotions. We show how psychological beliefs and attitudes about oneself bias the perceptual representation of one’s appearance and provide a unique window into the internal mental self-representation—findings that have important implications for mental health and visual culture.

Creators: Maister, Lara (0000-0001-8308-9722) and De Beukelaer, Sophie and Longo, Matthew R. and Tsakiris, Manos (0000-0001-7753-7576) and
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/09567976211018618
Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1177/09567976211018618
Subjects: Politics
Keywords: self-representation, body, appearance, reverse correlation, personality, self-face, open data
Divisions: School of Advanced Study: Central Offices
Collections: Past and Future
Dates:
  • 11 November 2021 (published)
  • 23 April 2021 (accepted)

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