| Literature DB >> 24988325 |
Vinet Coetzee1, Jaco M Greeff1, Ian D Stephen2, David I Perrett3.
Abstract
Previous work showed high agreement in facial attractiveness preferences within and across cultures. The aims of the current study were twofold. First, we tested cross-cultural agreement in the attractiveness judgements of White Scottish and Black South African students for own- and other-ethnicity faces. Results showed significant agreement between White Scottish and Black South African observers' attractiveness judgements, providing further evidence of strong cross-cultural agreement in facial attractiveness preferences. Second, we tested whether cross-cultural agreement is influenced by the ethnicity and/or the gender of the target group. White Scottish and Black South African observers showed significantly higher agreement for Scottish than for African faces, presumably because both groups are familiar with White European facial features, but the Scottish group are less familiar with Black African facial features. Further work investigating this discordance in cross-cultural attractiveness preferences for African faces show that Black South African observers rely more heavily on colour cues when judging African female faces for attractiveness, while White Scottish observers rely more heavily on shape cues. Results also show higher cross-cultural agreement for female, compared to male faces, albeit not significantly higher. The findings shed new light on the factors that influence cross-cultural agreement in attractiveness preferences.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24988325 PMCID: PMC4079334 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0099629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Visualisation of the shape and colour components.
Composite faces were transformed to illustrate exaggerated positive (+100%) and negative (−100%) dimensions of each significant and marginally significant shape and colour component. Images were arranged so that images on the right hand side always indicate the more attractive dimension. CC = colour component; SC = shape component.
Descriptive statistics for different observer groups.
| African observers | Scottish observers | |||
| N | Age | N | Age | |
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| Female | 30 (14 male) | 20.28±1.78 | 32 (13 male) | 20.56±1.72 |
| Male | 29 (14 male) | 20.75±2.63 | 30 (10 male) | 20.60±1.63 |
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| Female | 29 (11 male) | 20.90±1.76 | 26 (12 male) | 22.81±2.02 |
| Male | 27 (10 male) | 20.47±2.06 | 23 (10 male) | 21.24±2.21 |
Age indicated as Mean±SD. N refers to the number of observers.
Results from regression analyses for African and Scottish observers' attractiveness judgements of African faces.
| β | F/t | P | Effect size | 95% CI | ||
| Lower | Upper | |||||
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| Model | 1.642 | 0.131 | 0.389 | |||
| Colour component | 0.410 | 2.530 | 0.017 | 0.414 | 0.023 | 0.440 |
| Shape component 9 | −0.269 | −1.812 | 0.080 | −0.309 | −0.036 | 0.008 |
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| Model | 2.921 | 0.008 | 0.531 | |||
| Shape component 9 | −0.472 | −3.627 | 0.001 | −0.546 | −0.056 | −0.012 |
| Shape component 8 | −0.324 | −2.460 | 0.020 | −0.404 | −0.054 | −0.003 |
| Shape component 4 | −0.259 | −2.083 | 0.046 | −0.350 | −0.024 | 0.001 |
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| Model | 2.374 | 0.031 | 0.474 | |||
| Colour comp 1 | 0.472 | 2.854 | 0.008 | 0.473 | 0.037 | 0.512 |
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| Model | 0.792 | 0.647 | 0.231 | |||
Results obtained using simultaneous regression method. F statistics are indicated for the overall model and t statistics for individual coefficients. Effect size: R2 (model); Partial eta squared (variables). β indicates the standardized beta coefficient and CI the confidence interval based on 1000 bootstrap samples. Only significant and marginally significant (p≤0.08) coefficients are indicated. Higher values for the colour components indicate a lighter, yellower and redder complexion. High values for the shape components seem to indicate: higher facial adiposity and/or robustness (shape component 9); lower femininity and/or neoteny (shape component 8 and 4).