Skip to main content
Intended for healthcare professionals
Restricted access
Research article
First published March 1996

Averageness, Exaggeration, and Facial Attractiveness

Abstract

Langlois and her colleagues reported in this journal that composite faces are more attractive than the component faces used to create them, and conjectured that averageness is attractive (Langlois & Roggman, 1990, Langlois, Roggman, & Musselman, 1994) However, extremes may also be attractive (Perrett, May, & Yoshikawa, 1994) We investigated the effect of averageness (proximity to a norm or average face) on attractiveness using a computerized caricature generator to vary averageness Attractiveness increased with averageness (Experiment 1) and was negatively correlated with distinctiveness, a subjective measure of the converse of averageness (Expertments 1 and 2) Extremes (caricatures) were not attractive Line-drawing composites, which avoid some of the problems associated with gray-level composites, were significantly more attractive and less distinctive (more average) than individual faces (Experiment 2) These results support the claim that averageness is attractive

Get full access to this article

View all access and purchase options for this article.

References

Alley T.R., Cunningham M.R. (1991). Averaged faces are attractive but very attractive faces are not average. Psychological Science, 2, 123–125.
Baerends G.P (1982). Supernormality Behaviour, 82, 358–363.
Barash D.P. (1982). Sociobiology and behaviour. New York Elsevier North Holland.
Benson P.J., Perrett D.I. (1994). Face to face with the perfect image. New Scientist, 133, 32–35.
Benson P.J., Perrett D.I. (1994). Visual processing of facial distinctiveness Perception, 23, 75–93.
Brennan S.E. (1985). Caricature generator. Unpublished mailer's thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA.
Brennan S.E. (1985). The caricature generator. Leonardo, 18, 170–178.
Cronm H. (1991). The ant and the peacock Altruism and sexual selection from Darwin to today. Cambridge, England Cambridge University Press.
Dobzhansky T. (1970). Genetics of the evolutionary process. New York Columbia University Press.
Galton F. (1878). Composite portraits. Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain & Ireland, 8, 132–142.
Johnson M.H., Morton J. (1991). Biology and cognitive development. The cast of face recognition. Oxford, England Blackwell.
Langlois J.H., Roggman L.A. (1990). Attractive faces are only average Psychological Science, 1, 115–121.
Langlois J.H., Roggman L.A., Casey R.J., Ritter J.M., Rieser-Danner L.A., Jenkins V.Y. (1987). Infant preferences for attractive faces Rudiments of a stereotype?Developmental Psychology, 23, 363–369.
Langlois J.H., Roggman L.A., Musselman L. (1994). What is average and what is not average about attractive faces?Psychological Science, 5, 214–220.
Mauro R., Kubovy M. (1992). Caricature and face recognition. Memory & Cognition 20, 433–440.
Perrett D.I., May K.A., Yoshikawa S. (1994). Facial shape and judgements of female attractiveness Nature, 368, 239–242.
Pittenger J.B. (1991). On the difficulty of averaging faces Comments on Langlois and Roggman. Psychological Science, 2, 351–353.
Rhodes G. (in press). Superportraits Caricatures and recognition. Hove, England Erlbaum.
Rhodes G., Brennan S., Carey S. (1987). Identification and ratings of caricatures Implications for mental representations of faces Cognitive Psychology, 19, 473–497.
Rhodes G., Tremewan T. (1994). Understanding face recognition Caricature effects, inversion and the homogeneity problem Visual Cognition, 1, 275–311.
Ridley M. (1992). Research news–-Swallows and scorpionflies find symmetry beautiful Science, 257, 327–328.
Thomas D.R., Mood K., Morrison S., Wiertelak E. (1991). Peak shift revisited. A test of alternative interpretations. Journal of Experimental Psychology Animal Behavior Processes, 17, 130–140.
Tinbergen N. (1953). The herring gull's world. A study of the social behavior of birds. London Collins.
Valentine T. (1991). A unified account of the effects of distinctiveness, inversion, and race in face recognition. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 43A, 161–204.

Cite article

Cite article

Cite article

OR

Download to reference manager

If you have citation software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice

Share options

Share

Share this article

Share with email
EMAIL ARTICLE LINK
Share on social media

Share access to this article

Sharing links are not relevant where the article is open access and not available if you do not have a subscription.

For more information view the Sage Journals article sharing page.

Information, rights and permissions

Information

Published In

Article first published: March 1996
Issue published: March 1996

Rights and permissions

© 1996 Association for Psychological Science.
Request permissions for this article.

Authors

Affiliations

Gillian Rhodes
Canterbury University
Tanya Tremewan
Canterbury University

Notes

Address correspondence to Gillian Rhodes, Department of Psychology, Canterbury University, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch, New Zealand

Metrics and citations

Metrics

Journals metrics

This article was published in Psychological Science.

VIEW ALL JOURNAL METRICS

Article usage*

Total views and downloads: 851

*Article usage tracking started in December 2016


Altmetric

See the impact this article is making through the number of times it’s been read, and the Altmetric Score.
Learn more about the Altmetric Scores



Articles citing this one

Receive email alerts when this article is cited

Web of Science: 212 view articles Opens in new tab

Crossref: 203

  1. Neural processing of prototypicality and simplicity of product design ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  2. Three-dimensional evaluation of social smile asymmetry in patients wit...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  3. Reverse engineering and CAD/CAM application in the design of maxillofa...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  4. Do humans agree on which body odors are attractive, similar to the agr...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  5. „a/b = (a + b)/a“: Gibt es eine Formel für Schönheit?
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  6. Occlusion of faces by sanitary masks improves facial attractiveness of...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  7. Free energy model of emotional valence in dual-process perceptions
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  8. Beyond performance? The importance of subjective and objective physica...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  9. Predicting social media engagement with computer vision: An examinatio...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  10. I See Faces! A Review on Face Perception and Attractiveness with a Pro...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  11. The Effect of Facial Self-Resemblance on Emotional Mimicry
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  12. Aesthetic perception and the puzzle of training
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  13. Memorial Urban Art as an Aesthetic Experience in the City ‒ An Aesthet...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  14. Environmental convergence in facial preferences: a cross-group compari...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  15. A New Model to Simulate Human Facial Appearance, Accurately, and Reali...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  16. Having options alters the attractiveness of familiar versus novel face...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  17. An explicit religious label impacts visual adaptation to Christian and...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  18. Evaluation of facial asymmetry by stereophotogrammetry in individuals ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  19. Friend effects framework: Contrastive and hierarchical processing in c...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  20. The Human Being as a Driver
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  21. Chronotype dependent choosiness and mate choice
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  22. Turning the other cheek: Facial orientation influences both model attr...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  23. An Ai Method to Score Celebrity Visual Potential from Human Faces
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  24. The Value of Averageness in Aesthetic Rhinoplasty: Humans Like Average...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  25. Exploring distinctiveness, attractiveness and sexual dimorphism in act...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  26. Depiction of ethnic facial aging by forensic artists and preliminary a...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  27. The effects of face attractiveness on face memory depend on both age o...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  28. Mechanisms for the Cognitive Processing of Attractiveness in Adult and...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  29. Turning Heads: The Effects of Face View and Eye Gaze Direction on the ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  30. Facial soft tissue norms in Caucasians using an innovative three-dimen...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  31. Understanding Face Age Estimation: humans and machine
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  32. Understanding Beauty via Deep Facial Features
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  33. A Study of Facial Features of American and Japanese Cartoon Characters
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  34. Face perception loves a challenge: Less information sparks more attrac...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  35. Kitsch and Perception: Towards a New ‘Aesthetic from Below’
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  36. Judging a book by its Cover: The influence of physical attractiveness ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  37. Biological Bases of Beauty Revisited: The Effect of Symmetry, Averagen...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  38. Toward a New Approach to Cross-Cultural Distinctiveness and Typicality...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  39. A Functional Model of Kitsch and Art: Linking Aesthetic Appreciation t...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  40. Judging Others by Your Own Standards: Attractiveness of Primate Faces ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  41. Improving face identity perception in age-related macular degeneration...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  42. Proportions of the aesthetic African-Caribbean face: idealized ratios,...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  43. Temporal shifts in eye gaze and facial expressions independently contr...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  44. Computer-aided design of facial prostheses by means of 3D-data acquisi...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  45. An Adult Developmental Approach to Perceived Facial Attractiveness and...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  46. Human Body Odour Composites Are Not Perceived More Positively than the...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  47. The Effect of Romantic Relationships on the Evaluation of the Attracti...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  48. Universal Concepts of Beauty and Their Implications on Clinical Approa...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  49. Objective measures of design typicality
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  50. A Review of Attractiveness Preferences in Infancy: From Faces to Objec...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  51. Facial Shape Analysis Identifies Valid Cues to Aspects of Physiologica...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  52. Differential Trajectories in the Development of Attractiveness Biases ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  53. Preference for Averageness in Faces Does Not Generalize to Non-Human P...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  54. Facial Image Manipulation: A Tool for Investigating Social Perception
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  55. Face inversion increases attractiveness
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  56. How competitive are you: Analysis of people's attractiveness in an onl...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  57. Automatic Analysis of Aesthetics: Human Beauty, Attractiveness, and Li...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  58. Bibliographie
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  59. White eyes are the window to the pure soul: Metaphorical association a...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  60. The Visual Aesthetics of Snowflakes
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  61. Judging Normality and Attractiveness in Faces: Direct Evidence of a Mo...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  62. Perceptual and Social Attributes Underlining Age-Related Preferences f...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  63. FrankenFolk
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  64. The importance of key celebrity characteristics for customer segmentat...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  65. Attention Alters Perceived Attractiveness
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  66. Faces with Light Makeup Are Better Recognized than Faces with Heavy Ma...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  67. Judging a Book by Its Cover: Beauty Effects in the Promotion Tournamen...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  68. Strutting Hero, Sneaking Villain
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  69. An evaluation of post-production facial composite enhancement techniqu...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  70. Representing young and older adult faces: Shared or age-specific proto...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  71. Physical Attractiveness in Adaptationist Perspective
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  72. Differences in expressivity based on attractiveness: Target or perceiv...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  73. Stimulus-Response Bindings in the Go/NoGo Task
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  74. The own-age face recognition bias is task dependent
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  75. What Is Typical Is Good...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  76. Objective Aspects of Beauty
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  77. Der Mensch als Fahrer
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  78. The Riddle of Attractiveness: Looking for an ‘Aesthetic Sense’ Within ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  79. Attractiveness judgments and discrimination of mommies and grandmas: P...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  80. Facial attractiveness
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  81. Empirical aesthetics: hindsightand foresight
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  82. Mirror, mirror on the wall, who’s the fairest one of all? Influencing ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  83. Category-specific face prototypes are emerging, but not yet mature, in...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  84. Panel perception of facial appearance of cleft patients generated by u...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  85. Beauty is in the ease of the beholding: A neurophysiological test of t...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  86. Sex Differences in Attraction to Familiar and Unfamiliar Opposite-Sex ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  87. The influence of averageness on judgments of facial attractiveness: No...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  88. Agreement and Individual Differences in Men’s Preferences for Women’s ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  89. Orthognathic Surgery Treatment Planning
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  90. Easy on the eyes, or hard to categorize: Classification difficulty dec...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  91. The neural correlates of the face attractiveness aftereffect: A functi...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  92. Two Faces of Attractiveness...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  93. Cognitive Averaging
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  94. A Foxy View of Human Beauty: Implications of the Farm Fox Experiment f...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  95. Adaptation Effects to Attractiveness of Face Photographs and Art Portr...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  96. Aging Faces and Aging Perceivers: Young and Older Adults are Less Sens...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  97. The influence of averageness on children’s judgments of facial attract...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  98. Brand and category design consistency in brand extensions
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  99. Estimation of the Facial Impression from Individual Facial Features fo...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  100. Beauty is Wealth: CEO Appearance and Shareholder Value
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  101. Discriminating Thatcherised from typical faces in a case of prosopagno...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  102. Effect of facial stimuli exposure time on evaluation of facial attract...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  103. Effect of facial stimuli exposure time on evaluation of facial attract...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  104. Happiness as Surplus or Freely Available Energy
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  105. A survey of perception and computation of human beauty
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  106. Implicit experiences as a determinant of perceptual quality and aesthe...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  107. Facial attractiveness: evolutionary based research
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  108. Gut Liking for the Ordinary: Incorporating Design Fluency Improves Aut...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  109. Verankerung von Markenwerten im Produktdesign
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  110. Optimizing Facial Esthetics in the Orthognathic Surgery Patient
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  111. The development of norm-based coding and race-specific face prototypes...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  112. Age Synthesis and Estimation via Faces: A Survey
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  113. Neural activation in the “reward circuit” shows a nonlinear response t...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  114. Face off: Implications of visual cues on initiating friendship on Face...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  115. Facial Attractiveness: Is the Whole More Than the Sum of Its Parts?
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  116. Monkey visual behavior falls into the uncanny valley
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  117. Averageness or symmetry: Which is more important for facial attractive...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  118. To be different or to be average?
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  119. Comparison of Chinese and US orthodontists' averaged evaluations of “f...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  120. Too real for comfort? Uncanny responses to computer generated faces
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  121. Effect of averageness and sexual dimorphism on the judgment of facial ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  122. Caricature and Contrast in the Upper Palaeolithic: Morphometric Eviden...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  123. Dynamics and Evaluation: The Warm Glow of Processing Fluency
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  124. Ergonomics and Design
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  125. Biologiczne znaczenie atrakcyjności twarzy
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  126. Beauty as an Emotion: The Exhilarating Prospect of Mastering a Challen...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  127. A NEW METHOD FOR FACIAL FEATURES QUANTIFICATION OF CARICATURE BASED ON...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  128. The Influence of Recent Experience on Perceptions of Attractiveness
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  129. Computation of a face attractiveness index based on neoclassical canon...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  130. The appraisal of facial beauty is rapid but not mandatory
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  131. Racial Characteristics and Female Facial Attractiveness Perception Amo...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  132. Tall and Good-Looking?
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  133. Facial attractiveness: General patterns of facial preferences
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  134. Facial Averageness and Attractiveness in an Isolated Population of Hun...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  135. The role of symmetry in attraction to average faces
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  136. Perceived Health Contributes to the Attractiveness of Facial Symmetry,...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  137. Het effect van brandwondenlittekens op de persoonsbeoordeling
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  138. Contributions of the face and body to overall attractiveness
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  139. Catching the bad guy: Morphing composite faces helps.
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  140. Prototypes Are Attractive Because They Are Easy on the Mind
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  141. An Objective System for Measuring Facial Attractiveness
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  142. History and Current Concepts in the Analysis of Facial Attractiveness
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  143. Caricaturistic Visualization
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  144. Developmental changes in perceptions of attractiveness: a role of expe...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  145. What aspects of face processing are impaired in developmental prosopag...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  146. The Generality and Ultimate Origins of the Attractiveness of Prototype...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  147. Proceedings of the Facial Aesthetics Conference and Exhibition, Royal ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  148. The Evolutionary Psychology of Facial Beauty
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  149. The Role of Facial Attractiveness and Facial Masculinity/Femininity in...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  150. The Repeated Evaluation Technique (RET). A method to capture dynamic e...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  151. Is positivity a cue or a response option? Warm glow vs evaluative matc...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  152. Infant categorization of faces: Ladies first
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  153. Perceptual adaptation affects attractiveness of female bodies
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  154. Attractiveness of Own-Race, Other-Race, and Mixed-Race Faces
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  155. Attractiveness and sexual behavior: Does attractiveness enhance mating...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  156. Use of Neural Networks in Automatic Caricature Generation: An Approach...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  157. Physical Attractiveness and Health in Western Societies: A Review.
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  158. Processing Fluency and Aesthetic Pleasure: Is Beauty in the Perceiver'...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  159. Symmetry, averageness, and feature size in the facial attractiveness o...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  160. How different feature spaces may be represented in cortical maps
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  161. Self-enhancement and Self-protection Motivation: From the Laboratory t...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  162. Why are average faces attractive? The effect of view and averageness o...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  163. Familiarity Breeds Attraction: Effects of Exposure on the Attractivene...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  164. How different feature spaces may be represented in cortical maps
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  165. Human facial illustrations
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  166. Preadolescents' Recognition of Faces of Unfamiliar Peers: The Effect o...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  167. Fitting the mind to the World...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  168. Sex, Beauty, and the Relative Luminance of Facial Features
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  169. Trait Impressions as Overgeneralized Responses to Adaptively Significa...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  170. It’s not just average faces that are attractive: Computer-manipulated ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  171. Categorical perception of unfamiliar facial identities, the face-space...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  172. The Warm Glow Heuristic: When Liking Leads to Familiarity.
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  173. Looking Smart and Looking Good: Facial Cues to Intelligence and their ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  174. Children's recognition of caricatures.
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  175. Stabilizing and directional selection on facial paedomorphosis
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  176. Infants attend to second-order relational properties of faces
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  177. Attractiveness of Facial Averageness and Symmetry in Non-Western Cultu...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  178. Recognition of Facial Prototypes: The Importance of Categorical Struct...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  179. Recognising the Style of Spatially Exaggerated Tennis Serves
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  180. Generalization of Mere Exposure Effects to Averaged Composite Faces
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  181. Male facial attractiveness: Perceived personality and shifting female ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  182. Do facial averageness and symmetry signal health?
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  183. Mind at ease puts a smile on the face: Psychophysiological evidence th...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  184. Influence of adaptation on the perception of distortions in natural im...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  185. The face typicality-recognizability relationship: Encoding or retrieva...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  186. Caricature Effects, Distinctiveness, and Identification: Testing the F...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  187. On The Other Side of the Mean: The Perception of Dissimilarity in Huma...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  188. The Attractiveness of Nonface Averages: Implications for an Evolutiona...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  189. Modulation of event-related potentials by prototypical and atypical fa...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  190. Effects of the beholder’s age on the perception of facial attractivene...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  191. Attractiveness, attraction, and sexual selection: Evolutionary perspec...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  192. 3D shape and 2D surface textures of human faces: the role of “averages...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  193. Effects of the Height of the Internal Features of Faces on Adults' Aes...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  194. Morphing techniques for manipulating face images
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  195. Effects of Eye Size on Adults' Aesthetic Ratings of Faces and 5-Month-...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  196. Neural Rhythmicity, Feature Binding, and Serotonin: A Hypothesis
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  197. Average faces are average faces
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  198. Are Average Facial Configurations Attractive Only Because of Their Sym...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  199. Facial symmetry and the perception of beauty
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  200. Facial Aging, Attractiveness, and Distinctiveness
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  201. Coding spatial variations in faces and simple shapes: a test of two mo...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  202. Facial Distinctiveness and the Power of Caricatures
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  203. Ergonomie und Design
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar

Figures and tables

Figures & Media

Tables

View Options

Get access

Access options

If you have access to journal content via a personal subscription, university, library, employer or society, select from the options below:

APS members can access this journal content using society membership credentials.

APS members can access this journal content using society membership credentials.


Alternatively, view purchase options below:

Purchase 24 hour online access to view and download content.

Access journal content via a DeepDyve subscription or find out more about this option.

View options

PDF/ePub

View PDF/ePub