Why Face Symmetry Is Sexy
Across Cultures And Species
In humans, faces are an important source of social information.
One property of faces that is rapidly noticed is attractiveness.
Research has highlighted symmetry and sexual dimorphism (how masculine
or feminine a face is) as important variables that determine a
face's attractiveness.
But why are these traits attractive?
One idea is that both traits are adverts of genetic quality or
some other aspect of quality such as fertility. An alternative
view is that preferences for these traits arise through visual
experience and therefore not linked to any underlying biological
factors. Faces certainly have the potential to be advertisements
of mate 'quality' and one way to examine this idea is to look
at interrelationships between proposed adverts of quality.
In a study published in the May 7 issue of the journal PLoS ONE,
Anthony Little of the University of Stirling and colleagues show
that measurements of symmetry and sexual dimorphism from faces
are related in humans, both in Europeans and African hunter-gatherers,
and in a non-human primate. In all samples, symmetric males had
more masculine facial proportions and symmetric females had more
feminine facial proportions.
The findings therefore support the claim that sexual dimorphism
and symmetry in faces are signals advertising quality by providing
evidence that there must be a biological mechanism linking the
two traits during development. For example, individuals resistant
to disease may be able to grow both symmetric and sexually dimorphic.
Such work also suggests that faces may advertise quality across
different human populations and even across different primate
species.
The researchers are currently collecting data on human perceptions
of facial beauty at http://www.alittlelab.com,
which also presents more information about their work.
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