http://cogprints.org/4601/
The face, beauty, and symmetry: Perceiving asymmetry in beautiful faces
The relationship between bilateral facial symmetry and beauty remains to be clarified. Here, straight head-on photographs of “beautiful” faces from the collections of professional modeling agencies were selected. First, beauty ratings were obtained for these faces. Then, the authors created symmetrical left-left and right-right composites of the beautiful faces and asked a new group of subjects to choose the most attractive pair member. “Same” responses were allowed. No difference between the left-left and right-right composites was revealed but significant differences were obtained between “same” and the left-left or right-right. These results show that subjects detected asymmetry in beauty and suggest that very beautiful faces can be functionally asymmetrical.
Zaidel, Dr. Dahlia W.
Cohen, Jennifer A.
Neuropsychology
Evolutionary Psychology
Behavioral Neuroscience
Dahlia W.
Zaidel
Jennifer A.
Cohen