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2.
Perception ; 37(8): 1216-26, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18853557

ABSTRACT

Adults rate average faces as more attractive than most of the faces used in the creation of the average. One explanation for this is that average faces appear as both more familiar and more attractive because they resemble internal face prototypes formed from experience. Here we evaluated that explanation by examining the influence of recent experience on participants' subsequent judgments of attractiveness. Participants first performed a memory task lasting 8 min in which all of the female faces to be remembered had their features placed in a low, average, or high position, depending on experimental condition. In what was described as a separate experiment, participants then moved the features of a female face with averaged features to their most attractive vertical location. The most attractive location was affected by the faces seen during the memory task, with participants who saw faces with features in the high position placing features in higher locations than participants who saw faces with features in either the low or average positions. The results demonstrate that perceptions of attractiveness are influenced by recent experience, and suggest that internal face prototypes are constantly being updated by experience.


Subject(s)
Esthetics , Face , Form Perception/physiology , Judgment , Memory/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Female , Humans , Male , Psychophysics , Teaching , Young Adult
3.
Dev Sci ; 9(5): 530-43, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16911455

ABSTRACT

In three experiments, we traced the development of the adult pattern of judgments of attractiveness for faces that have been altered to have internal features in low, average, or high positions. Twelve-year-olds and adults demonstrated identical patterns of results: they rated faces with features in an average location as significantly more attractive than faces with either low or high features. Although both 4-year-olds and 9-year-olds rated faces with high features as least attractive, unlike adults and 12-year-olds, they rated faces with low and average features as equally attractive. Three-year-olds with high levels of peer interaction, but not those with low levels of peer interaction, chose faces with low features as significantly more attractive than those with high-placed features, possibly as a result of their increased experience with the proportions of the faces of peers. Overall, the pattern of results is consistent with the hypothesis that experience influences perceptions of attractiveness, with the proportions of the faces participants see in their everyday lives influencing their perceptions of attractiveness.


Subject(s)
Esthetics , Face , Judgment , Life Change Events , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child Development , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Perception , Social Perception
4.
Proc Biol Sci ; 273(1592): 1355-60, 2006 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16777723

ABSTRACT

Studies of women's preferences for male faces have variously reported preferences for masculine faces, preferences for feminine faces and no effect of masculinity-femininity on male facial attractiveness. It has been suggested that these apparently inconsistent findings are, at least partly, due to differences in the methods used to manipulate the masculinity of face images or individual differences in attraction to facial cues associated with youth. Here, however, we show that women's preferences for masculinity manipulated in male faces using techniques similar to the three most widely used methods are positively inter-related. We also show that women's preferences for masculine male faces are positively related to ratings of the masculinity of their actual partner and their ideal partner. Correlations with partner masculinity were independent of real and ideal partner age, which were not associated with facial masculinity preference. Collectively, these findings suggest that variability among studies in their findings for women's masculinity preferences reflects individual differences in attraction to masculinity rather than differences in the methods used to manufacture stimuli, and are important for the interpretation of previous and future studies of facial masculinity.


Subject(s)
Choice Behavior , Face/anatomy & histology , Sex Characteristics , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Cues , Female , Humans , Male
5.
Brain Cogn ; 61(2): 139-58, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16466839

ABSTRACT

Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a severe impairment in identifying faces that is present from early in life and that occurs despite no apparent brain damage and intact visual and intellectual function. Here, we investigated what aspects of face processing are impaired/spared in developmental prosopagnosia by examining a relatively large group of individuals with DP (n = 8) using an extensive battery of well-established tasks. The tasks included measures of sensitivity to global motion and to global form, detection that a stimulus is a face, determination of its sex, holistic face processing, processing of face identity based on features, contour, and the spacing of features, and judgments of attractiveness. The DP cases showed normal sensitivity to global motion and global form and performed normally on our tests of face detection and holistic processing. On the other tasks, many DP cases were impaired but there was no systematic pattern. At least half showed deficits in processing of facial identity based on either the outer contour or spacing of the internal features, and/or on judgments of attractiveness. Three of the eight were impaired in processing facial identify based on the shape of internal features. The results show that DP is a heterogeneous condition and that impairment in recognizing faces cannot be predicted by poor performance on any one measure of face processing.


Subject(s)
Face , Prosopagnosia/diagnosis , Prosopagnosia/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Female , Form Perception/physiology , Humans , Judgment , Middle Aged , Motion Perception/physiology , Recognition, Psychology , Severity of Illness Index , Sex Factors , Signal Detection, Psychological/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology
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