Halo Effect
Type: Cognitive Bias
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Definition
One positive trait colors perception of all other traits. Attractive people seem smarter. Charismatic CEOs seem competent.
Edward Thorndike (1920): Military officers rated subordinates. Those rated high on one trait (intelligence) were rated high on unrelated traits (leadership, loyalty).
Why It Matters
Hiring: Attractive candidates rated more qualified. Leadership: Charismatic leaders assumed competent regardless of results. Products: Beautiful design masks poor functionality. Dating: “They’re hot AND smart AND funny” — Maybe just hot?
The Reverse: Horn Effect
One negative trait poisons everything else.
“They’re rude AND incompetent AND untrustworthy” — Maybe just rude?
Manifestations
| Domain | Halo Source | Assumed |
|---|---|---|
| People | Attractiveness | Intelligence, kindness |
| Products | Design | Quality, reliability |
| Companies | Brand | Ethics, quality |
| Celebrities | Fame | Expertise on unrelated topics |
Fighting It
- Separate evaluations — Rate traits independently
- Blind review — Remove identifying info
- Check data — What are the actual results?
- Consider opposite — “What if an ugly person did this?”
Related Biases
- Affect Heuristic — Feeling colors judgment
- Fundamental Attribution Error — Trait assumed from behavior
- Beauty Bias — Subset of halo
Audio
Podcast episode: Halo Effect
Part of the Cognitive Bias Reference