AI Article Synopsis

  • Amplifiers improve the perception of quality differences, helping high-quality individuals stand out while making low-quality traits more noticeable.
  • The evolution of traits like the human nose may serve as an amplifier, aiding in the assessment of individual attractiveness in social interactions.
  • Experiments show that centering the nose tip in facial images enhances perceived attractiveness, suggesting that symmetry or balance plays a role, though the link to individual quality is still uncertain.

Article Abstract

Amplifiers are signals that improve the perception of underlying differences in quality. They are cost free and advantageous to high quality individuals, but disadvantageous to low quality individuals, as poor quality is easier perceived because of the amplifier. For an amplifier to evolve, the average fitness benefit to the high quality individuals should be higher than the average cost for the low quality individuals. The human nose is, compared to the nose of most other primates, extraordinary large, fragile and easily broken-especially in male-male interactions. May it have evolved as an amplifier among high quality individuals, allowing easy assessment of individual quality and influencing the perception of attractiveness? We tested the latter by manipulating the position of the nose tip or, as a control, the mouth in facial pictures and had the pictures rated for attractiveness. Our results show that facial attractiveness failed to be influenced by mouth manipulations. Yet, facial attractiveness increased when the nose tip was artificially centered according to other facial features. Conversely, attractiveness decreased when the nose tip was displaced away from its central position. Our results suggest that our evaluation of attractiveness is clearly sensitive to the centering of the nose tip, possibly because it affects our perception of the face's symmetry and/or averageness. However, whether such centering is related to individual quality remains unclear.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3994647PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.357DOI Listing

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