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Attractiveness
Psychologists have examined what
faces people attractive. Researchers at the University of St Andrews in
Scotland have looked at facial features that determine people’s
attractiveness; Perrett, in the journal Nature in 1994. Using digital
mixtures of multiple features of human faces with computer generated morphing
techniques they found that while averaged faces were attractive to some
extent the most attractive faces were those that were slightly different in
facial composite and features than the average. The message here is that to
be very attractive in psychological terms, a human face needs to be slightly
different from the average, but not too different from the
average!
Little & Hancock in 2002
investigated masculinity and attractiveness in men's facial
features.
Composite faces, that is faces
showing a mixture of characteristics were found to be more attractive than
individual faces. Averaging features resulted in increased ratings of
attractiveness but decreased ratings of masculinity and distinctiveness. This
supported the idea that attractiveness is related to averageness with a
preference for female characteristics in male faces. The results suggested
that masculinity and distinctiveness are separate components in face
recognition.
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