"Facial attractiveness" refers to how visually pleasing or appealing someone's face appears to others.
Full definition
Nevertheless, the current HC status × HC status at relationship formation × husbands»
facial attractiveness interaction was negatively associated with wives» marital satisfaction in all three analyses.
A great deal of research
on facial attractiveness tends to focus on symmetry, in which both sides of the face are proportional and perfectly mirror one another.
You see, researchers suspect that hormonal birth control may cause some women to
value facial attractiveness less while on the pill, but more so when they stop taking it, says Michelle Russell, the study's lead researcher and a graduate student in psychology at Florida State University.
They've got a website that offers you (accessible) papers
on facial attractiveness, and — much more fun — a page where you can make an average face out of any number of face photos as raw material.
The review concluded that
perceived facial attractiveness is significantly correlated with teacher expectations of academic performance and positive personality attributes.
Determined to investigate the importance of skin color in judgements
of facial attractiveness, as well as mate choices, in three separate, yet linked, Internet - based studies, the team set out to examine the importance of high levels of these pigments (carotenoids and melanin) in attraction choices.
A new and innovative study recently published in The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology sheds new light on the importance of skin color as a determiner of
facial attractiveness.
«Women's
facial attractiveness may be more sensitive to changes in weight,» said Rule.
Scientists at the University of Toronto evaluated weight loss and
facial attractiveness.
Controls were introduced for the influence of
facial attractiveness, affect ratings, the number of lawyers per firm, and years of experience for the managing partner being rated.
Facial Attractiveness: Evolutionary, Cognitive, and Social Perspectives (Advances in Visual Cognition, V. 1).
Evolutionary psychology of
facial attractiveness.