Can YOU spot the right-winger and the liberal? AI predicts people's politics by ... trends now

Can YOU spot the right-winger and the liberal? AI predicts people's politics by ... trends now
Can YOU spot the right-winger and the liberal? AI predicts people's politics by ... trends now

Can YOU spot the right-winger and the liberal? AI predicts people's politics by ... trends now

The 'pink-haired liberal' has become something of a stereotype, but AI can now predict someone's politics based solely on their looks.

A new program can spot tiny nuances in people's facial features that correlate to their political leaning - with over 70 percent accuracy.

It was trained on hundreds of photos and voting habits of Americans.

The results found that liberals tended to have smaller lower faces, their chins were smaller and their lips and noses pointed downward, while conservatives have larger, wider features in the lower halves of their faces.

Dr. Michal Kosinski, the study's lead author, warned that facial recognition tools are dangerous if they fall into the wrong hands because millions of people's information could be accessed without their consent.

Researchers used facial recognition software to identify a person's political affiliation based on their characteristics. It found that conservatives tended to have wider lower faces while liberals had smaller lower faces and downturned lips and nose

Researchers used facial recognition software to identify a person's political affiliation based on their characteristics. It found that conservatives tended to have wider lower faces while liberals had smaller lower faces and downturned lips and nose

Slide me

Former President Donald Trump - conservative (left) and President Joe Biden - liberal (right). Trump has a wider jaw line than Biden whose lower face is more narrow with the telltale slightly downturned lips that would label him as a liberal

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American conservative political commentator Candace Owens (left) and liberal television host Oprah Winfrey (right). Owens lower face is slightly wider than Winfrey's which is smaller and comes to a more pointed angle

Kosinski and his team looked at expressionless facial images of 591 participants and natural images of 3,400 politicians from the US, UK and Canada and found a predictive model could accurately discern the person's political orientation.

The study gives more insight into how facial recognition can be used to discern someone's private information from a Facebook photo - even if they haven't posted their views online.

'Our findings underscore the urgency for scholars, the public, and policymakers to recognize and address the potential risks of facial recognition technology to personal privacy,' the study warned.

'Even more worrisome, these algorithms can identify personal attributes that were, thus far, widely considered to be unrecognizable from faces,' it added.

Kosinski told Fox News Digital that 'algorithms can be very easily applied to millions of people very quickly and cheaply' and that the study is 'more of a warning tale' about the technology 'that is in your phone and is very widely used everywhere.'

The study had participants fill out a political orientation questionnaire which asked  whether they tend to vote for more liberal or conservative political candidates and if they

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