| Literature DB >> 26986828 |
Jessica Taubert1, Erik Van der Burg1,2, David Alais1.
Abstract
Millions of people use online dating sites each day, scanning through streams of face images in search of an attractive mate. Face images, like most visual stimuli, undergo processes whereby the current percept is altered by exposure to previous visual input. Recent studies using rapid sequences of faces have found that perception of face identity is biased towards recently seen faces, promoting identity-invariance over time, and this has been extended to perceived face attractiveness. In this paper we adapt the rapid sequence task to ask a question about mate selection pertinent in the digital age. We designed a binary task mimicking the selection interface currently popular in online dating websites in which observers typically make binary decisions (attractive or unattractive) about each face in a sequence of unfamiliar faces. Our findings show that binary attractiveness decisions are not independent: we are more likely to rate a face as attractive when the preceding face was attractive than when it was unattractive.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26986828 PMCID: PMC4795074 DOI: 10.1038/srep22740
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) General procedure (arrows and labels are for illustrative purposes only and were not visible during the experiment). Stimuli depicted are examples of photographs taken of men who consented to have their images reproduced for scientific communication. 300 faces were briefly presented in a random sequence and participants made a binary attractiveness judgement about each one: attractive or not attractive. (B) Bar graph of main results, averaged across subjects (N = 16; error bars = ±1SEM). Horizontal dashed line indicates general attractiveness (mean attractiveness score for all faces averaged across all subjects). In the centre is the [t − 1] inter-trial effect, an assimilative effect whereby the attractiveness of a current face is higher when preceded by an attractive face, and lower when preceded by an unattractive face. On the left is the [t − 2] effect, showing a weaker but still significant assimilative effect (t15 = 3.27, p < 0.005, paired two-tail t-test). As a means of control, we calculated the [t + 1] effect. As predicted, this produced a null result as the attractiveness of an unseen future face, whether attractive or unattractive, should not alter the attractiveness of the currently viewed face (t15 = 1.48, p = 0.16, paired two-tail t-test). (C) The distribution of responses (% of trials where the response was ‘attractive’) across the stimulus set (N = 60) as a function of previous-trial attractiveness. Green bars reflect the distribution of scores when the preceding trial presented an attractive stimulus (with an average score greater than a subject’s grand mean); red bars reflect the distribution of scores when the preceding trials presented an unattractive stimulus (with an average score less than a subject’s grand mean). (D) Time course of the [t − 1] inter-trial effect plotted over 10 intervals of 30 trials showing the effect of the preceding face’s attractiveness on the current trial was consistent across the entire trial block. The dashed horizontal line indicates general attractiveness as in panel (B).
Figure 2(A) The distribution of responses across the stimulus set (black bars when the stimuli were upright, red bars when the stimuli were inverted). (B) Results of Experiment 2: the effect of inter-trial orientation. The inter-trial attractiveness effect shown for all four orientation conditions. The two left-hand columns show congruent inter-trial face orientation and the two right-hand columns show incongruent inter-trial orientation. The data are group-averaged (N = 16) inter-trial attractiveness differences and error bars illustrate ±1 SEM.