An exploratory, cross-cultural study on perception of putative cyclical changes in facial fertility cues
Marcinkowska, Urszula M. and Jones, Benedict C. and Cai, Huaijan and Contreras-Garduno, Jorge and Onyishi, Ike E. and Orjiakor, Charles T. and Prasai, Keshav and Pazhoohi, Farid and Taniguchi, Hirokazu and Lee, Anthony J. (2021) An exploratory, cross-cultural study on perception of putative cyclical changes in facial fertility cues. Scientific Reports, 11 (1). 16911. ISSN 2045-2322 (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-96454-w)
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Abstract
Although many researchers have argued that facial traits evolved as honest cues to women's current fertility (possibly via changes in facial femininity), evidence that women's facial attractiveness is significantly, positively related to probability of conception throughout menstrual cycle is mixed. These mixed results could reflect differences among studies in the methods used to assess facial attractiveness (i.e., forced choice versus rating-scale methods), differences in how fertility was assessed, differences in perceiver characteristics (e.g., their own attractiveness), and facial preferences possibly being moderated by the characteristics of the living environment. Consequently, the current study investigated the putative effect of cyclical changes in fertility on women's facial attractiveness and femininity (1) using forced choice and rating-scale method, (2) conducting both ovulation tests and repeated daily measures of estradiol assessing the conception probability, (3) based on a culturally diverse sample of perceivers, while (4) controlling for inter-individual variation. Although we found some limited evidence that women's faces became more attractive when conception probability increased, these effects differed depending on the methods used to assess both attractiveness and fertility. Moreover, where statistically significant effects were observed, the effect sizes were extremely small. Similarly, there was little robust evidence that perceivers' characteristics reliably predicted preferences for fertility cues. Collectively, these results suggest that mixed results in previous studies examining cyclical fluctuation in women's facial attractiveness are unlikely to reflect inter-cultural differences and are more likely to reflect differences in the methods used to assess facial attractiveness and fertility.
ORCID iDs
Marcinkowska, Urszula M., Jones, Benedict C. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7777-0220, Cai, Huaijan, Contreras-Garduno, Jorge, Onyishi, Ike E., Orjiakor, Charles T., Prasai, Keshav, Pazhoohi, Farid, Taniguchi, Hirokazu and Lee, Anthony J.;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 77654 Dates: DateEvent19 August 2021Published2 August 2021AcceptedSubjects: Philosophy. Psychology. Religion > Psychology Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Psychological Sciences and Health > Psychology Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 03 Sep 2021 15:15 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 13:12 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/77654