Relationship between facial symmetry and perceived health and attractiveness, with a test of the ability of Homo sapiens to discriminate facial symmetry across species

Past research suggest that facial symmetry is as an honest indicator of the biological fitness of the organism, and more symmetrical faces were consistently found to be perceived as more attractive and healthier. However, most studies had focused from an intraspecies perspective. Therefore, it was o...

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Main Authors: Chua, Sok Hoon, Yang, Shan Shan
Other Authors: Michael David Gumert
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/18725
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-187252019-12-10T13:12:56Z Relationship between facial symmetry and perceived health and attractiveness, with a test of the ability of Homo sapiens to discriminate facial symmetry across species Chua, Sok Hoon Yang, Shan Shan Michael David Gumert School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology Past research suggest that facial symmetry is as an honest indicator of the biological fitness of the organism, and more symmetrical faces were consistently found to be perceived as more attractive and healthier. However, most studies had focused from an intraspecies perspective. Therefore, it was of interest to test if previous findings remain true when carried out from an interspecies perspective. Effect of the degree of genetic differences between the perceiver and the perceived targets on humans’ perception of attractiveness and health was also examined. Support was found for the relationship between facial symmetry and perceived attractiveness, but not for perceived health. Difference in phylogenetic distances was not found to have an influence on participants’ perception of attractiveness and health. Implications of the role of facial symmetry as an indicator of biological fitness were discussed. Bachelor of Arts 2009-07-06T08:23:53Z 2009-07-06T08:23:53Z 2009 2009 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/18725 en Nanyang Technological University 78 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Chua, Sok Hoon
Yang, Shan Shan
Relationship between facial symmetry and perceived health and attractiveness, with a test of the ability of Homo sapiens to discriminate facial symmetry across species
description Past research suggest that facial symmetry is as an honest indicator of the biological fitness of the organism, and more symmetrical faces were consistently found to be perceived as more attractive and healthier. However, most studies had focused from an intraspecies perspective. Therefore, it was of interest to test if previous findings remain true when carried out from an interspecies perspective. Effect of the degree of genetic differences between the perceiver and the perceived targets on humans’ perception of attractiveness and health was also examined. Support was found for the relationship between facial symmetry and perceived attractiveness, but not for perceived health. Difference in phylogenetic distances was not found to have an influence on participants’ perception of attractiveness and health. Implications of the role of facial symmetry as an indicator of biological fitness were discussed.
author2 Michael David Gumert
author_facet Michael David Gumert
Chua, Sok Hoon
Yang, Shan Shan
format Final Year Project
author Chua, Sok Hoon
Yang, Shan Shan
author_sort Chua, Sok Hoon
title Relationship between facial symmetry and perceived health and attractiveness, with a test of the ability of Homo sapiens to discriminate facial symmetry across species
title_short Relationship between facial symmetry and perceived health and attractiveness, with a test of the ability of Homo sapiens to discriminate facial symmetry across species
title_full Relationship between facial symmetry and perceived health and attractiveness, with a test of the ability of Homo sapiens to discriminate facial symmetry across species
title_fullStr Relationship between facial symmetry and perceived health and attractiveness, with a test of the ability of Homo sapiens to discriminate facial symmetry across species
title_full_unstemmed Relationship between facial symmetry and perceived health and attractiveness, with a test of the ability of Homo sapiens to discriminate facial symmetry across species
title_sort relationship between facial symmetry and perceived health and attractiveness, with a test of the ability of homo sapiens to discriminate facial symmetry across species
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/18725
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