4.3 Article

Unattractive faces are more attractive when the bottom-half is masked, an effect that reverses when the top-half is concealed

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s41235-022-00359-9

Keywords

Facial attractiveness; Face mask; Full and half human faces; Age; Positivity bias; Upper- and lower-face

Funding

  1. Killam Postdoctoral Research Fellowship
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [2016-04319]
  3. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada [435-2019-0749]

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The research found that wearing a face mask increases the perceived attractiveness of relatively unattractive faces, but has no effect on highly attractive faces. The eye region plays a crucial role in the perception of attractiveness, especially for highly attractive faces.
Facial attractiveness in humans signals an individual's genetic condition, underlying physiology and health status, serving as a cue to one's mate value. The practice of wearing face masks for prevention of transmission of airborne infections may disrupt one's ability to evaluate facial attractiveness, and with it, cues to an individual's health and genetic condition. The current research investigated the effect of face masks on the perception of face attractiveness. Across four studies, we tested if below- and above-average attractive full faces are equally affected by wearing facial masks. The results reveal that for young faces (Study 1) and old faces (Study 2) a facial mask increases the perceived attractiveness of relatively unattractive faces, but there is no effect of wearing a face mask for highly attractive faces. Study 3 shows that the same pattern of ratings emerged when the bottom-half of the faces are cropped rather than masked, indicating that the effect is not mask-specific. Our final Study 4, in which information from only the lower half of the faces was made available, showed that contrary to our previous findings, highly attractive half-faces are perceived to be less attractive than their full-face counterpart; but there is no such effect for the less attractive faces. This demonstrates the importance of the eye-region in the perception of attractiveness, especially for highly attractive faces. Collectively these findings suggest that a positivity-bias enhances the perception of unattractive faces when only the upper face is visible, a finding that may not extend to attractive faces because of the perceptual weight placed on their eye-region.

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