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Jersey Numbers Affect How Thin Football Players Appear

Author: University of California - Los Angeles
Published: 2023/09/07 - Updated: 2026/01/21
Publication Details: Peer-Reviewed, Findings
Category Topic: Offbeat News - Related Publications

Page Content: Synopsis - Introduction - Main - Insights, Updates

Synopsis: This research from UCLA's Multisensory Processing Lab demonstrates that viewers perceive football players wearing jersey numbers 10-19 as noticeably thinner than identically-sized players in numbers 80-89, a finding rooted in how our brains unconsciously associate numbers with object magnitude based on everyday experience - such as grocery labels or gym weights. The study holds particular relevance for understanding perception bias in sports, workplace accommodations for athletes with disabilities, and broader insights into implicit bias that can affect how people judge others based on visual associations, making it valuable for disability advocates and those seeking to understand how perceptual patterns influence human judgment and behavior - Disabled World (DW).

Introduction

In 2019, an ESPN report explored the reasons so many football wide receivers prefer to wear jersey numbers between 10 and 19. The story found that many of the athletes simply believed the lower numbers made them look faster and slimmer than the higher numbers traditionally assigned to their position.

Main Content

Ladan Shams, a UCLA professor of psychology and neuroscience, was quoted in the story and offered a psychological explanation for the phenomenon. But she emphasized that there was no scientific research on the topic. Now there is... A new UCLA study published in the journal PLOS ONE reveals that those wide receivers were onto something.

In two experiments, subjects consistently said that images of players in jerseys numbered from 10 to 19 looked thinner than those in jerseys numbered from 80 to 89, even when the body sizes were the same. The finding suggests that previously learned statistical associations between numbers and sizes influence the perception of body size.

"How we perceive the world is highly influenced by our prior knowledge," said Shams, the paper's senior author. "In our daily lives, numbers written on objects - on a bag of sugar in the supermarket or weights in the gym - usually represent the magnitude of the objects. The higher the number, the bigger or more massive the object generally is."

"Previous research has established that our brains are very good at detecting and storing statistical associations and regularities, unbeknownst to us, and those associations can shape future perception."

Three rows of American football players show the optical illusion of smaller jersey numbers appearing to make the players look thinner - Image Credit: Multisensory Processing Lab/UCLA, PLOS One.
Three rows of American football players show the optical illusion of smaller jersey numbers appearing to make the players look thinner - Image Credit: Multisensory Processing Lab/UCLA, PLOS One.

Research subjects consistently said that images of players in jerseys numbered from 10 to 19 looked thinner than those in jerseys numbered from 80 to 89.

A longtime NFL rule required wide receivers to wear uniform numbers between 80 and 89, but the league changed the restriction in 2004, opening the door for pass-catchers who preferred lower numbers on their uniforms. By 2019, when ESPN published its story, nearly 80% of wide receivers wore a jersey number between 10 and 19.

Shams is a specialist in the science of perception, and when her other work ground to a halt during the COVID-19 pandemic, she returned to the question about jersey numbers. With her research group, she devised an online study to test her suppositions about the popularity of lower numbers.

Respondents were shown computer-generated images of players in identical poses - but with different body sizes and skin and jersey colors - and were asked to judge their slenderness. Subjects saw each player twice - once each in jerseys with high and low numbers. In general, the players in jerseys numbered from 10 to 19 were perceived as thinner than players in jerseys numbered 80 to 89, regardless of their body size and their skin or jersey colors.

After pandemic restrictions eased, the researchers repeated the experiment in person.

This time, they addressed concerns that because the numeral 8 is wider than 1, simply the amount of jersey space occupied by numbers from 80 to 89 could make players look larger. So they chose number combinations that used the same numerals but varied only in which digit came first: 17 and 71, 18 and 81, 19 and 91.

In this second experiment, subjects still perceived the players with higher numbers to be huskier than players with lower numbers, although the effect was somewhat smaller than in the first iteration.

Shams said the results strongly support the hypothesis that when processing perception of body size, the brain leans on learned associations between numbers and objects' size attributes. That finding is consistent with previous research showing that statistical learning is a fundamental and universal learning mechanism.

Those learned associations, Shams said, generally help the brain interpret sensory input - the pattern of light receptor responses in the eye, for example - because sensory input can be noisy, unreliable and ambiguous. The ability to perceive the world faster and more correctly is critical for survival, she said.

How viewers perceive football players' body size likely has little effect on the athletes' performance. But in other areas of life, such perceptual and cognitive biases can be more harmful - for example, when they influence judgment, decisions and behavior toward people or social groups, a phenomenon often referred to as implicit bias. If a group is frequently associated with negative qualities, others are much more likely to treat people in that group accordingly, whether they realize it or not.

"Our work highlights the importance of representation," Shams said. "We need to see all kinds of people doing the full diversity of things people can do. We can use the statistical learning power of our brains to reduce implicit bias."

Insights, Analysis, and Developments

Editorial Note: While the jersey number illusion may seem like quirky sports trivia, it offers a window into something far more consequential: how our brains unconsciously process statistical patterns to interpret the world around us. Dr. Shams's research suggests that what appears to happen in an NFL stadium reflects a universal cognitive mechanism that operates in all human perception - one that can inadvertently amplify stereotypes and biases in hiring, healthcare, education, and social interactions. For the disability community and broader society, this finding underscores why representation matters profoundly; when people encounter diverse representations of all body types, abilities, and characteristics across all contexts, they naturally recalibrate the statistical associations their brains use to judge others, gradually weakening the automatic biases that can marginalize or misrepresent entire groups - Disabled World (DW).

Attribution/Source(s): This peer reviewed publication was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World (DW) due to its relevance to the disability community. Originally authored by University of California - Los Angeles and published on 2023/09/07, this content may have been edited for style, clarity, or brevity.

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APA: University of California - Los Angeles. (2023, September 7 - Last revised: 2026, January 21). Jersey Numbers Affect How Thin Football Players Appear. Disabled World (DW). Retrieved January 30, 2026 from www.disabled-world.com/news/offbeat/football-numbers.php
MLA: University of California - Los Angeles. "Jersey Numbers Affect How Thin Football Players Appear." Disabled World (DW), 7 Sep. 2023, revised 21 Jan. 2026. Web. 30 Jan. 2026. <www.disabled-world.com/news/offbeat/football-numbers.php>.
Chicago: University of California - Los Angeles. "Jersey Numbers Affect How Thin Football Players Appear." Disabled World (DW). Last modified January 21, 2026. www.disabled-world.com/news/offbeat/football-numbers.php.

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