4.4 Article

An Evolutionary Perspective on Appearance Enhancement Behavior

Journal

ARCHIVES OF SEXUAL BEHAVIOR
Volume 51, Issue 1, Pages 3-37

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10508-020-01745-4

Keywords

Physical attractiveness; Self-promotion; Appearance enhancement behavior; Mating effort; Evolutionary psychology

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This article discusses the sociocultural factors and evolutionary psychology influences on appearance enhancement behavior. Research shows that people are influenced by peers, family, the media, and sexual objectification in their desire to enhance their appearance. Evolutionary psychology can explain how this behavior is connected to reproductive success and how individual and contextual differences impact appearance enhancement.
Researchers have highlighted numerous sociocultural factors that have been shown to underpin human appearance enhancement practices, including the influence of peers, family, the media, and sexual objectification. Fewer scholars have approached appearance enhancement from an evolutionary perspective or considered how sociocultural factors interact with evolved psychology to produce appearance enhancement behavior. Following others, we argue that evidence from the field of evolutionary psychology can complement existing sociocultural models by yielding unique insight into the historical and cross-cultural ubiquity of competition over aspects of physical appearance to embody what is desired by potential mates. An evolutionary lens can help to make sense of reliable sex and individual differences that impact appearance enhancement, as well as the context-dependent nature of putative adaptations that function to increase physical attractiveness. In the current review, appearance enhancement is described as a self-promotion strategy used to enhance reproductive success by rendering oneself more attractive than rivals to mates, thereby increasing one's mate value. The varied ways in which humans enhance their appearance are described, as well as the divergent tactics used by women and men to augment their appearance, which correspond to the preferences of opposite-sex mates in a heterosexual context. Evolutionarily relevant individual differences and contextual factors that vary predictably with appearance enhancement behavior are also discussed. The complementarity of sociocultural and evolutionary perspectives is emphasized and recommended avenues for future interdisciplinary research are provided for scholars interested in studying appearance enhancement behavior.

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