Zaidel, D. W. and Aarde, S. M. and Baig, K. (2005) Appearance of symmetry, beauty, and health in human faces. [Journal (Paginated)]
Full text available as:
|
PDF
283Kb |
Abstract
Symmetry is an important concept in biology, being related to mate selection strategies, health, and survival of species. In human faces, the relevance of left-right symmetry to attractiveness and health is not well understood. We compared the appearance of facial attractiveness, health, and symmetry in three separate experiments. Participants inspected front views of faces on the computer screen and judged them on a 5-point scale according to their attractiveness in Experiment 1, health in Experiment 2, and symmetry in Experiment 3. We found that symmetry and attractiveness were not strongly related in faces of women or men while health and symmetry were related. There was a significant difference between attractiveness and symmetry judgments but not between health and symmetry judgments. Moreover, there was a significant difference between attractiveness and health. Facial symmetry may be critical for the appearance of health but it does not seem to be critical for the appearance of attractiveness, not surprisingly perhaps because human faces together with the human brain have been shaped by adaptive evolution to be naturally asymmetrical.
Item Type: | Journal (Paginated) |
---|---|
Keywords: | symmetry, face, faces, beauty, attractiveness, asymmetry, brain, cortex, evolution, perception |
Subjects: | Neuroscience > Neuropsychology Biology > Evolution Psychology > Evolutionary Psychology |
ID Code: | 4349 |
Deposited By: | Zaidel, Dahlia W. |
Deposited On: | 14 May 2005 |
Last Modified: | 11 Mar 2011 08:56 |
References in Article
Select the SEEK icon to attempt to find the referenced article. If it does not appear to be in cogprints you will be forwarded to the paracite service. Poorly formated references will probably not work.
Metadata
- ASCII Citation
- Atom
- BibTeX
- Dublin Core
- EP3 XML
- EPrints Application Profile (experimental)
- EndNote
- HTML Citation
- ID Plus Text Citation
- JSON
- METS
- MODS
- MPEG-21 DIDL
- OpenURL ContextObject
- OpenURL ContextObject in Span
- RDF+N-Triples
- RDF+N3
- RDF+XML
- Refer
- Reference Manager
- Search Data Dump
- Simple Metadata
- YAML
Repository Staff Only: item control page