| Literature DB >> 30622491 |
Stefan de Jager1,2, Nicoleen Coetzee2, Vinet Coetzee3.
Abstract
The relationship between facial cues and perceptions of health and attractiveness in others plays an influential role in our social interactions and mating behaviors. Several facial cues have historically been investigated in this regard, with facial adiposity being the newest addition. Evidence is mounting that a robust link exists between facial adiposity and attractiveness, as well as perceived health. Facial adiposity has also been linked to various health outcomes such as cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease, blood pressure, immune function, diabetes, arthritis, oxidative stress, hormones, and mental health. Though recent advances in the analysis of facial morphology has led to significant strides in the description and quantification of facial cues, it is becoming increasingly clear that there is a great deal of nuance in the way that humans use and integrate facial cues to form coherent social or health judgments of others. This paper serves as a review of the current literature on the relationship between facial adiposity, attractiveness, and health. A key component in utilizing facial adiposity as a cue to health and attractiveness perceptions is that people need to be able to estimate body mass from facial cues. To estimate the strength of the relationship between perceived facial adiposity and body mass, a meta-analysis was conducted on studies that quantified the relationship between perceived facial adiposity and BMI/percentage body fat. Summary effect size estimates indicate that participants could reliably estimate BMI from facial cues alone (r = 0.71, n = 458).Entities:
Keywords: BMI; attractiveness; facial adiposity; health outcomes; meta-analysis; perceived health; percentage body fat
Year: 2018 PMID: 30622491 PMCID: PMC6308207 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Summary of studies that investigated the relationship between facial adiposity and attractiveness.
| Coetzee et al., | 84 | M + F | <30 | Significant curvilinear relationship between facial adiposity and attractiveness ( |
| Klaczynski et al., | 64 | M + F | <18 | Average weight facial drawings were considered more attractive than obese facial drawings ( |
| Coetzee et al., | 96 | M + F | <30 | On average, female faces were transformed by female raters to represent a BMI of 19.76 kg/m2 to reflect optimal attractiveness |
| Coetzee et al., | 45 | F | <30 | Significant negative relationship between adiposity and attractiveness ( |
| Rantala et al., | 52 | F | <20 | Negative correlation between facial adiposity and attractiveness ( |
| Fisher et al., | 100 | M + F | <30 | Small negative correlation between facial adiposity and attractiveness for males ( |
| Re and Perrett, | 20 | M + F | <30 | On average, female faces were transformed to represent a BMI of 18.19 kg/m2 to reflect optimal attractiveness |
| Batres and Perrett, | 10 | M + F | <30 | Participants without internet access preferred faces with higher adiposity for females ( |
| Fisher et al., | 160 | M + F | - | Two way interaction revealed that facial adiposity had a larger impact on facial attractiveness ratings ( |
| Fisher et al., | 100 | M + F | <30 | Small negative correlation between facial adiposity and attractiveness for males ( |
| Han et al., | 96 | F | <30 | Significant negative relationship between adiposity and attractiveness ( |
| Re and Rule, | 40 | M + F | <30 | On average, female faces were transformed to represent a BMI of 19.11 kg/m2 to reflect optimal attractiveness |
| Foo et al., | 101 | M | <30 | Significant negative relationship between facial adiposity and attractiveness ( |
| 80 | F | <30 | Significant negative relationship between facial adiposity and attractiveness ( | |
| Batres et al., | 10 | M + F | <30 | Participants from rural areas in Malaysia preferred faces with higher adiposity for females ( |
| Phalane et al., | 92 | M | <30 | Significant curvilinear relationship between adiposity and perceived health ( |
| Windhager et al., | – | F | – | Curvilinear relationship between facial adiposity and attractiveness for male raters: adolescents ( |
| – | F | – | Curvilinear relationship between facial adiposity and attractiveness for female raters: adolescents ( | |
Used the same facial stimuli panels
Summary of studies that investigated the relationship between facial adiposity and perceived health.
| Coetzee et al., | 84 | M + F | <30 | Significant curvilinear relationship between adiposity and perceived health ( |
| Coetzee et al., | 96 | F | <30 | Female raters indicated significantly lower BMI is required for attractiveness (19.76 kg/m2) compared to optimum health (20.84 kg/m2). No such difference was found for males |
| Fisher et al., | 20 | M + F | - | Facial adiposity had a significant effect on perceived health ratings ( |
| Han et al., | 96 | F | <30 | Significant linear relationship between adiposity and perceived health ( |
| Stephen et al., | 60 | M + F | - | Raters significantly reduced BMI ( |
| Axelsson et al., | 16 | M + F | - | Higher sickness ratings were related to a more swollen facial appearance ( |
| Henderson et al., | 118 | M + F | <30 | Significant quadratic relationship between adiposity scores and perceived health ratings ( |
| 67 | F | <30 | Significant quadratic relationship between adiposity scores and perceived health ratings ( | |
| Foo et al., | 101 | M | <30 | Significant negative relationship between facial adiposity and perceived health ( |
| 80 | F | <30 | Significant negative relationship between facial adiposity and perceived health ( | |
| Phalane et al., | 92 | M | <30 | Significant curvilinear relationship between adiposity and perceived health ( |
| Windhager et al., | 5 | F | – | Curvilinear relationship between facial adiposity and perceived health for male raters: adolescents ( |
| 5 | F | – | Curvilinear relationship between facial adiposity and perceived health for female raters: adolescents ( | |
Summary of studies that investigated the relationship between facial adiposity and health outcomes.
| Coetzee et al., | 84 | M + F | <30 | Significant relationship between facial adiposity and cold and flu Number ( |
| Reither et al., | 3027 | M + F | <30 | Adolescents who were rated as having higher levels of facial adiposity were more likely to experience muscle aches ( |
| Tinlin et al., | 50 | F | <30 | Significant correlation between facial adiposity and a psychological condition factor ( |
| Rantala et al., | 69 | M | <30 | Circulating testosterone was positively correlated with adiposity ( |
| Han et al., | 96 | F | <30 | No Significant relationship between adiposity and average cortisol levels ( |
| Martinson and Vasunilashorn, | 4410 | M + F | <30 | Females who were rated as being overweight ( |
| Foo et al., | 101 | M | <30 | Significant negative correlation between facial adiposity and an indicator of oxidative stress (8OHdG levels) ( |
| 80 | F | <30 | No relationship between facial adiposity and indicators of oxidative stress and lipid peroxidation or immune function (bacterial killing capacity, overall bacterial immunity, bacterial suppression capacity and lysozyme activity) | |
| Phalane et al., | 92 | M | <30 | No significant relationship between adiposity and immune function as measured by a cytokine component ( |
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart for selection of studies.
Summary of studies that investigated the relationship between facial adiposity and BMI/Percentage body fat.
| Coetzee et al., | 84 | M + F | 55 | M + F | - | 0.66 | ||
| Coetzee et al., | 45 | F | – | 30 | M + F | - | 0.75 | |
| Tinlin et al., | 50 | F | 21 | M + F | 0.68 | |||
| 50 | F | 26 | M + F | 0.66 | ||||
| 50 | F | 160 | M + F | 0.63 | ||||
| Rantala et al., | 69 | M | 14 | F | 0.75 | |||
| Fisher et al., | 50 | M | 50 | M + F | 0.58 | |||
| 50 | F | 50 | M + F | 0.66 | ||||
| Han et al., | 96 | F | 463 | M + F | 0.67 | |||
| Phalane et al., | 92 | M | 20 | F | 0.68 | |||
Figure 2Forest plot of relationship between perceived facial adiposity and BMI/ percentage body fat.
Figure 3Plot of the (A) studentized deleted residuals; (B) DFFITS values; (C) Cook's distances; (D) covariance ratios; (E) estimates of τ2; (F) test statistics for (residual) heterogeneity; (G) hat values; and (H) weight for the 7 studies included in the analysis.
Figure 4Funnel plot of standard errors by correlation coefficient.