Psychological Mechanisms Behind the Halo Effect
The halo effect “is a cognitive bias whereby people form an opinion based on a specific positive or negative attribute of a product, brand, or person, based on their predisposition towards another attribute” (Nicolau et al., 2022, p. 499).
Our predispositions shape the effect and result in oversimplifications and biased judgments (Nicolau et al., 2022).
What psychological mechanisms are involved?
Several essential psychological mechanisms are playing a part in the halo effect (Fabrizio, 2014; Nicolau et al., 2022):
- Context
Psychosocial context impacts the degree of the halo effect. For example, our view of the overall workplace is influenced by individual aspects of the dynamics between employees, how they see each other, and their perceptions of teamwork, leadership, and career progression.
- Expectation
If we expect positive qualities in a person, we are more likely to see them in a good light. For example, if we plan a first date with an individual we know to be attractive, we are more likely to experience them as engaging, humorous, and intelligent.
- Emotional state
How we feel influences our experience of events, objects, and people. If we feel hopeful and grateful, we are more likely to see our coworkers as skilled, effective communicators who are excellent at their jobs.
- Attractiveness
Our perception of how attractive someone or something is can direct our judgment. The handsome waiter will likely serve a better-tasting meal, and the beautiful lawyer may offer better advice.
- Extrapolation of impressions
Having made a judgment on one aspect of a situation, we attribute it to others or the whole event (object or person). Such extrapolation is often not based on logic or reasoning but instead on insufficient or inaccurate information.
- Interconnectedness of attributes
We see connections between attributes, even when they don’t exist. A good communicator may not be skilled at other aspects of their job. After making an independent assessment of an attribute, we form an evaluative bias about the whole.
How it influences decision-making
Like other cognitive biases, the halo effect offers a mental shortcut, speeding up decision-making. It reduces cognitive load by offering fast heuristics (rules of thumb). It relies on overall impressions rather than evaluating every attribute or quality of a person, object, or event (Nicolau et al., 2022).
However, while decisions may be more immediate, the halo effect can lead to unhelpful prejudices and blatantly false assumptions (Nicolau et al., 2022).
Seeing the Halo Effect in Life: 4 Examples
There are real-world effects to attributing socially desirable personality traits to physically attractive individuals.
Justice
Studies suggest that the halo effect can harm the legal system, potentially biasing judgments and influencing decisions (Batres & Shiramizu, 2023).
In mock trials, jurors were less likely to find attractive people guilty, and if they were, they were given lesser sentences (Batres & Shiramizu, 2023).
Workplace
We also see the halo effect in the workplace, mainly when things go wrong.
While teams are typically credited for successes, they are less likely to be blamed for their failures (Naquin & Tynan, 2003).
Indeed, we are quick to blame individuals but not groups working together. Our judgment is influenced by a sole employee’s lack of knowledge or poor decision-making skills rather than team thinking (Naquin & Tynan, 2003).
“Team experience, and by extension, depth of knowledge about teams, appears to reduce” the tendency to attribute blame, even when justified (Naquin & Tynan, 2003, p. 338).
Education
Teacher feedback is vital to student development, often providing the primary source of information on academic progress and achievement (Schmidt et al., 2023).
Yet such feedback is open to bias.
Halo effects are observed in teacher judgments, occurring “when the assessment of one aspect of a person’s achievement is generalized to another aspect of achievement for that same person” (Schmidt et al., 2023, p. 246).
As a result, the scores and comments teachers give their students may not accurately reflect their students’ abilities (Schmidt et al., 2023).
Digital marketing
The chatter experienced on social media significantly influences consumer behavior.
Research suggests that comments regarding individual aspects of a brand or product spill over to other characteristics (Borah & Tellis, 2016).
It turns out that recalling a product (for example, a car) because of a single defect negatively impacts how the entire brand is viewed, potentially impacting sales and stock market performance (Borah & Tellis, 2016).
“Online chatter amplifies the negative effect of recalls on downstream sales by about 4.5 times” (Borah & Tellis, 2016, p. 143).