| Literature DB >> 25849992 |
Michael P Haselhuhn1, Margaret E Ormiston2, Elaine M Wong1.
Abstract
Recent research has identified men's facial width-to-height ratio (fWHR) as a reliable predictor of aggressive tendencies and behavior. Other research, however, has failed to replicate the fWHR-aggression relationship and has questioned whether previous findings are robust. In the current paper, we synthesize existing work by conducting a meta-analysis to estimate whether and how fWHR predicts aggression. Our results indicate a small, but significant, positive relationship between men's fWHR and aggression.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25849992 PMCID: PMC4388848 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0122637
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA flow chart.
PRISMA flowchart detailing selection of studies included in meta-analysis.
Included studies.
| Paper | Effect size | Sample size | Sample location | Measure of aggression (Direct vs. Indirect) | Method of facial height measurement | Type of study | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carré, J.M., & McCormick, C.M. (2008). In your face: Facial metrics predict aggressive behavior in the laboratory and in varsity and professional hockey players. | 0.380 | 37 | Canada | Retaliation in game context (Direct) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Laboratory | |
| Carré, J.M., & McCormick, C.M. (2008). In your face: Facial metrics predict aggressive behavior in the laboratory and in varsity and professional hockey players. | 0.540 | 21 | Canada | Penalties in hockey games (Direct) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Field | |
| Carré, J.M., & McCormick, C.M. (2008). In your face: Facial metrics predict aggressive behavior in the laboratory and in varsity and professional hockey players. | 0.300 | 112 | Canada | Penalties in hockey games (Direct) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Field | |
| Stirrat, M. & Perrett, D.I. (2010). Valid facial cues to cooperation and trust: Male facial width and trustworthiness. | 0.400 | 36 | United Kingdom | Untrustworthy actions in economic games (Indirect) | Upper lip to upper eyelid | Laboratory | |
| Deaner, R.O., Goetz, S.M.M., Shattuck, K. & Schnotala, T. (2012). Body weight, not facial width-to-height ration, predicts aggression in pro hockey players. | 0.062 | 495.5 | Canada; United States | Penalties in hockey games (Direct) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Field | |
| Haselhuhn, M.P. & Wong, E.M. (2012). Bad to the bone: Facial structure predicts unethical behaviour. | 0.305 | 51 | United States | Deception in negotiation (Indirect) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Laboratory | Zero-order correlations obtained from author |
| Haselhuhn, M.P. & Wong, E.M. (2012). Bad to the bone: Facial structure predicts unethical behaviour. | 0.362 | 50 | United States | Cheating (Indirect) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Laboratory | |
| Ozener, B. (2012). Facial width-to-height ratio in a Turkish population is not sexually dimorphic and is unrelated to aggressive behavior. | -0.006 | 108 | Turkey | Scale measure (Direct) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Laboratory | |
| Stirrat, M., Stulp, G. & Pollet, T.V. (2012). Male facial width is associated with death by contact violence: Narrow-faced males are more likely to die from contact violence. | 0.188 | 523 | United States | Death by contact violence (Indirect) | Not Indicated | Field | |
| Carré, J.M., Murphy, K.R. & Hariri, A.R. (2013). What lies beneath the face of aggression? | -0.040 | 27 | United States | Scale measure (Direct) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Laboratory | Zero-order correlations obtained from author |
| Goetz, S.M.M., Shattuck, K.S., Miller, R.M., Campbell, J.A., Lozoya, E., Weisfeld, G.E. & Carré, J.M. (2013). Social status moderates the relationship between facial structure and aggression. | 0.080 | 868 | United States | Penalties in hockey games (Direct) | Not Indicated | Field | |
| Goetz, S.M.M., Shattuck, K.S., Miller, R.M., Campbell, J.A., Lozoya, E., Weisfeld, G.E. & Carré, J.M. (2013). Social status moderates the relationship between facial structure and aggression. | 0.187 | 113 | United States | Retaliation in game context (Direct) | Not Indicated | Laboratory | |
| Gomez-Valdes, J., Hunemeir, T., Quinto-Sanchez, M., Paschetta, C., de Azevendo, S., Gonzalez, M.F., Martinez-Abadias, N., Esparza, M., Pucciarelli, H.M., Salzano, F.M., Bau, C.H.D., Bortolini, M.C., Gonzalez-Jose, R. (2013). Lack of support for the association between facial shape and aggression: A reappraisal based on a worldwide population genetics perspective. | 0.00 | 163 | Mexico | Severity of crime (Indirect) | Not Indicated | Field | |
| Geniole, S.N., Keyes, AE., Carré, J.M. & McCormick, C.M. (2014). Fearless dominance mediates the relationship between the facial width-to-height ratio and willingness to cheat. | 0.230 | 127 | Canada; United States | Cheating (Indirect) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Laboratory | |
| Lefevre, C.E., Etchells, P.J., Howell, E.C., Clark, A.P., & Penton-Voak, I.S. (2014). Facial width-to-height ratio predicts self-reported dominance and aggression in males and females, but a measure of masculinity does not. Biology Letters, 10: 20140729. | 0.270 | 54 | United Kingdom | Scale measure (Direct) | Upper lip to upper eyelid | Laboratory | |
| Třebický, V., Fialová, J., Kleisner, K., Roberts, S. C., Little, A. C., & Havlíček, J. (2014) Further evidence for links between facial width-to-height ratio and fighting success: Commentary on Zilioli et al. (2014). | 0.114 | 146 | Varied | Fighting success (Direct) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Field | |
| Mills, J. (in press). CEO facial width predicts firm financial policies. | 0.033 | 968 | United States | Financial misconduct (Indirect) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Field | |
| Zilioli, S., Sell, A.N., Stirrat, M., Jagore, J., Vickerman, W. & Watson, N.V. (in press). Face of a fighter: Bizygomatic width as a cue of formidability. | 0.154 | 241 | Varied | Fighting success (Direct) | Upper lip to mid-brow | Field |
List of studies included in meta-analysis.
Fig 2Funnel plot.
Funnel plot of Z-transformed effect sizes, plotted against their standard error.