Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2010 Jun 9;5(6):e11027. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011027.
Evolutionary theory suggests that natural selection favors the evolution of cognitive abilities which allow humans to use facial cues to assess traits of others. The use of facial and somatic cues by humans has been studied mainly in western industrialized countries, leaving unanswered whether results are valid across cultures.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Our objectives were to test (i) if previous finding about raters' ability to get accurate information about an individual by looking at his facial photograph held in low-income non western rural societies and (ii) whether women and men differ in this ability. To answer the questions we did a study during July-August 2007 among the Tsimane', a native Amazonian society of foragers-farmers in Bolivia. We asked 40 females and 40 males 16-25 years of age to rate four traits in 93 facial photographs of other Tsimane' males. The four traits were based on sexual selection theory, and included health, dominance, knowledge, and sociability. The rating scale for each trait ranged from one (least) to four (most). The average rating for each trait was calculated for each individual in the photograph and regressed against objective measures of the trait from the person in the photograph. We found that (i) female Tsimane' raters were able to assess facial cues related to health, dominance, and knowledge and (ii) male Tsimane' raters were able to assess facial cues related to dominance, knowledge, and sociability.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results support the existence of a human ability to identify objective traits from facial cues, as suggested by evolutionary theory.
进化理论表明,自然选择有利于进化出认知能力,使人类能够利用面部线索来评估他人的特征。人类对面部和躯体线索的利用主要在西方工业化国家进行研究,因此对于这些结果是否在不同文化中有效仍存在疑问。
方法/主要发现:我们的目标是检验(i)通过观察其面部照片,低水平非西方农村社会中的评分者是否能够获得关于个体的准确信息的先前发现是否仍然成立,以及(ii)女性和男性在这种能力上是否存在差异。为了回答这些问题,我们在 2007 年 7 月至 8 月期间在玻利维亚的亚马逊原住民 Tsimane'进行了一项研究。我们要求 40 名女性和 40 名 16-25 岁的男性对 93 张其他 Tsimane'男性的面部照片中的 4 个特征进行评分。这四个特征基于性选择理论,包括健康、支配地位、知识和社交能力。每个特征的评分范围从 1(最少)到 4(最多)。为照片中的每个人计算每个特征的平均评分,并将其与照片中该人的特征的客观衡量标准进行回归。我们发现(i)女性 Tsimane'评分者能够评估与健康、支配地位和知识相关的面部线索,以及(ii)男性 Tsimane'评分者能够评估与支配地位、知识和社交能力相关的面部线索。
结论/意义:我们的结果支持了人类从面部线索识别客观特征的能力的存在,这正如进化理论所表明的那样。