Dario Furnari1,2,5,6,7*, Nadya Khan3, Melissa Delaney1, Margaret Cerna1,5, Khaled Hamlaoui1, Sebastien Lagree1,2, Amy Peace1,2, Megan Owens1,2, Shanee Lee Scott1,2, Tanya Crowle1,2, Susana Sanchez1, Elena Talyanova1, Monika Milczarek4, Abdulrahim Aljayar1, Sergey Petrov1,7, Juan Jose Ariet1, Himanshu Tiwari1, VV Manjula Kumari1, Vladyslav Melnyk1, Heather Perren1,2, Timothy Lee1, Michael Cochard1, Sandy Wanna1, Mia M Michel1,2, Clarice Santos1, Charlie Peebles1,6, Chutima Halg1 and Erik Dalton1
1Department of Biomedical Sciences, UK, Germany, Netherlands, USA
2Department of Lagree Studio, Los Angeles, USA
3Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, UAEU
4Department Monroe Medical, UK
5Kimec Institute, USA
6Indiana State University, USA
7Lotus Academy, Ukraine
*Corresponding Author: Dario Furnari, Department of Biomedical Sciences, UK, Germany, Netherlands, USA.
Received: September 21, 2022 Published: October 25, 2022
With the diffusion of the various Social Networks, Facebook- Twitter-Istagram-Tik Tok, and above all with the immoderate use in this quarantine-virus period, it happens more and more often to create more and more profiles, finding yourself with a delicate simple but decisive choice: Which photo to choose? There are those who put the close-up of their face, who a whole picture of themselves, who children, who the pet, who the landscape, who a quote. But if the goal is to be attractive or interesting, who doesn't want to?!, The best choice is a group photo with friends. And once again science comes to meet us: two researchers from the University of San Diego, D. Walker and E. Vul, have shown that faces appear more attractive when they appear in a group, the so-called "cheerleader effect". For example, let's take Cheerleader girls, certainly beautiful girls, but their beauty is an optical illusion, produced by the fact that the groups appear instead of individually.
Citation: Dario Furnari., et al. “Cheerleader Effect - Psychology and Neuroscience". Acta Scientific Pharmacology 3.11 (2022): 07-08.
Copyright: © 2022 Dario Furnari., et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.