Abstract
Facial attractiveness has been suggested to provide signals of biological quality, particularly health, in humans. The attractive traits that have been implicated as signals of biological quality include sexual dimorphism, symmetry, averageness, adiposity, and carotenoid-based skin colour. In this study, we first provide a comprehensive examination of the traits that predict attractiveness. In men, attractiveness was predicted positively by masculinity, symmetry, averageness, and negatively by adiposity. In women, attractiveness was predicted positively by femininity and negatively by adiposity. Skin colour did not predict attractiveness in either sex, suggesting that, despite recent interest in the literature, colour may play limited role in determining attractiveness. Male perceived health was predicted positively by averageness, symmetry, and skin yellowness, and negatively by adiposity. Female perceived health was predicted by femininity. We then examined whether appearance predicted actual health using measures that have been theoretically linked to sexual selection, including immune function, oxidative stress, and semen quality. In women, there was little evidence that female appearance predicted health. In men, we found support for the phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis that male masculinity signalled semen quality. However, we also found a negative relationship between averageness and semen quality. Overall, these results indicate weak links between attractive facial traits and health.
Highlights
Facial attractiveness has been suggested to provide signals of biological quality, health, in humans
We examined whether appearance predicted actual health using measures that have been theoretically linked to sexual selection, including immune function, oxidative stress, and semen quality
We did so because perception of sexual dimorphism, averageness, symmetry, and adiposity could be influenced by both face shape and colour
Summary
Facial attractiveness has been suggested to provide signals of biological quality, health, in humans. The attractive traits that have been implicated as signals of biological quality include sexual dimorphism, symmetry, averageness, adiposity, and carotenoid-based skin colour. We found a negative relationship between averageness and semen quality Overall, these results indicate weak links between attractive facial traits and health. Numerous aspects of health, including immune function[11], oxidative stress[12], and semen quality[13], have been associated with sexual signalling because of their importance to survival and/or reproduction. Evolutionary psychologists have identified several facial traits as potential candidates for biologically-based mate preferences, including sexual dimorphism (masculinity for men and femininity for women), averageness, symmetry, adiposity, and skin colour[1,2,3]. We examine how all these traits are linked to attractiveness and health
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