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首页> 外文期刊>Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience >Beauty is in the ease of the beholding: A neurophysiological test of the averageness theory of facial attractiveness
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Beauty is in the ease of the beholding: A neurophysiological test of the averageness theory of facial attractiveness

机译:轻松吸引人:面部吸引力平均理论的神经生理学测试

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Hundreds of studies have shown that people prefer attractive over unattractive faces. But what is an attractive face, and why is it preferred? Averageness theory claims that faces are perceived as being attractive when their facial configuration approximates the mathematical average facial configuration of the population. Conversely, faces that deviate from this average configuration are perceived as being unattractive. The theory predicts that both attractive and mathematically averaged faces should be processed more fluently than unattractive faces, whereas the averaged faces should be processed marginally more fluently than the attractive faces. We compared neurocognitive and behavioral responses to attractive, unattractive, and averaged human faces to test these predictions. We recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) and reaction times (RTs) from 48 adults while they discriminated between human and chimpanzee faces. The participants categorized averaged and high-attractive faces as being "human" faster than low-attractive faces. The posterior N170 (150-225 ms) face-evoked ERP component was smaller in response to high-attractive and averaged faces than to low-attractive faces. Single-trial electroencephalographic analysis indicated that this reduced ERP response arose from the engagement of fewer neural resources, and not from a change in the temporal consistency of how those resources were engaged. These findings provide novel evidence that faces are perceived as being attractive when they approximate a facial configuration close to the population average, and they suggest that processing fluency underlies preferences for attractive faces.
机译:数百项研究表明,人们比没有吸引力的面孔更喜欢吸引人。但是,什么是一张吸引人的面孔,为什么要优先使用它呢?平均性理论声称,当人脸的脸部轮廓近似于人口的数学平均脸部轮廓时,它们就被认为具有吸引力。相反,偏离此平均配置的面孔被认为没有吸引力。该理论预测,有吸引力和数学平均的脸比不吸引人的脸都要更流畅地处理,而平均的脸比吸引的脸要更流畅些。我们将神经认知和行为反应与有吸引力的,没有吸引力的和平均的人脸进行了比较,以测试这些预测。我们记录了48位成年人在区分人脸和黑猩猩脸部时的事件相关电位(ERP)和反应时间(RTs)。参与者将平均和高吸引力的面孔归为“人类”,比低吸引力的面孔更快。后N170(150-225 ms)面部诱发的ERP组件对高吸引力和平均面孔的响应比对低吸引力面孔的响应小。单次试验脑电图分析表明,这种减少的ERP反应是由于较少的神经资源投入而引起的,而不是由于这些资源的利用方式在时间上的一致性发生了变化。这些发现提供了新颖的证据,表明当面孔的脸部轮廓接近人口平均水平时,它们就被认为具有吸引力,并且它们表明加工流畅性是吸引人的面孔的基础。

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