Zilioli Samuele, Sell Aaron N, Stirrat Michael, Jagore Justin, Vickerman William, Watson Neil V
Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Griffith University, Nathan, QLD, Australia.
Aggress Behav. 2015 Jul-Aug;41(4):322-30. doi: 10.1002/ab.21544. Epub 2014 Jun 6.
Humans can accurately extract information about men's formidability from their faces; however, the actual facial cues that inform these judgments have not been established. Here, through three studies, we test the hypothesis that bizygomatic width (i.e. facial width-to-height ratio, fWHR) covaries with actual physical formidability (hypothesis #1) and that humans use this cue when making assessments of formidability (hypothesis #2). Our data confirm that fWHR is predictive of actual fighting ability among professional combatants (study 1). We further show that subjects' assessments of formidability covary with the target's fWHR on natural faces (study 2), computer-generated images of strong and weak faces (study 2), and experimentally manipulated computer-generated faces (study 3). These results support the hypothesis that bizygomatic width is a cue of formidability that is assessed during agonistic encounters.
人类能够从男性面部准确提取有关其威慑力的信息;然而,构成这些判断的实际面部线索尚未明确。在此,通过三项研究,我们检验了以下假设:颧骨间宽度(即面部宽高比,fWHR)与实际身体威慑力存在共变关系(假设1),并且人类在评估威慑力时会利用这一线索(假设2)。我们的数据证实,fWHR能够预测职业格斗者的实际战斗能力(研究1)。我们进一步表明,在自然面孔(研究2)、强弱面孔的计算机生成图像(研究2)以及经过实验操控的计算机生成面孔(研究3)上,受试者对威慑力的评估与目标的fWHR存在共变关系。这些结果支持了以下假设:颧骨间宽度是在对抗性遭遇中被评估的一种威慑力线索。