Distinctiveness and femininity, not symmetry and masculinity, affect facial attractiveness across the world

Abstract

Studies investigating facial attractiveness in humans have frequently been limited to studying the effect of individual factors in isolation from other facial components in the same population. In this study we go beyond this approach by combining geometric morphometrics and a Bayesian statistical framework. We investigate preferences in both sexes for three structural components of facial beauty that are traditionally considered indicators of biological quality: symmetry, sexual dimorphism, and distinctiveness. Based on a large sample of faces (n=1550) from 10 populations across the world (Brazil, Cameroon, Czechia, Colombia, India, Namibia, Romania, Turkey, UK, and Vietnam), we found that distinctiveness negatively affects the perception of attractiveness in both sexes and that this association is stable across all studied populations. We corroborated some previous results indicating both a positive effect of femininity on female facial beauty and a null or weak effect of masculinity on male facial attractiveness. Surprisingly, facial symmetry had no effect on facial attractiveness. In concert with other recent studies, our results support the importance of facial prototypicality but cast doubt on the role of symmetry as one of the key constituents of attractiveness in the human face.

Publication
Submitted
Karel Kleisner
Karel Kleisner
Deputy Head of Department

Deputy Head of Department (Department of Philosophy and History of Science, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic).

Juan David Leongómez
Juan David Leongómez
Associate Professor

My research interests include mate choice and human vocal communication, with an aspiration towards understanding musicality. I am also interested in bioacoustics and psychoacoustics, as well as statistics and  programming.

S. Craig Roberts
S. Craig Roberts
Professor of Human Ethology

Professor of Human Ethology (Division of Psychology, University of Stirling, Stirling, UK), and former president of the International Society for Human Ethology (ISHE).

Jan Havlíček
Jan Havlíček
Professor

Professor and principal investigator of the Human Ethology research group (Faculty of Science, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic), and Vice President of the International Society for Human Ethology (ISHE)

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