Germine Laura, Russell Richard, Bronstad P Matthew, Blokland Gabriëlla A M, Smoller Jordan W, Kwok Holum, Anthony Samuel E, Nakayama Ken, Rhodes Gillian, Wilmer Jeremy B
Psychiatric and Neurodevelopmental Genetics Unit, Center for Human Genetic Research, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114, USA; Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Psychology Department, Gettysburg College, Gettysburg, PA 17325, USA.
Curr Biol. 2015 Oct 19;25(20):2684-9. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.08.048. Epub 2015 Oct 1.
Although certain characteristics of human faces are broadly considered more attractive (e.g., symmetry, averageness), people also routinely disagree with each other on the relative attractiveness of faces. That is, to some significant degree, beauty is in the "eye of the beholder." Here, we investigate the origins of these individual differences in face preferences using a twin design, allowing us to estimate the relative contributions of genetic and environmental variation to individual face attractiveness judgments or face preferences. We first show that individual face preferences (IP) can be reliably measured and are readily dissociable from other types of attractiveness judgments (e.g., judgments of scenes, objects). Next, we show that individual face preferences result primarily from environments that are unique to each individual. This is in striking contrast to individual differences in face identity recognition, which result primarily from variations in genes [1]. We thus complete an etiological double dissociation between two core domains of social perception (judgments of identity versus attractiveness) within the same visual stimulus (the face). At the same time, we provide an example, rare in behavioral genetics, of a reliably and objectively measured behavioral characteristic where variations are shaped mostly by the environment. The large impact of experience on individual face preferences provides a novel window into the evolution and architecture of the social brain, while lending new empirical support to the long-standing claim that environments shape individual notions of what is attractive.
尽管人类面部的某些特征被广泛认为更具吸引力(例如,对称性、平均性),但人们在面部相对吸引力方面也常常存在分歧。也就是说,在很大程度上,美是“情人眼里出西施”。在此,我们采用双胞胎设计来探究这些个体面部偏好差异的根源,这使我们能够估计基因和环境变异对个体面部吸引力判断或面部偏好的相对贡献。我们首先表明,个体面部偏好(IP)能够被可靠地测量,并且很容易与其他类型的吸引力判断(例如,对场景、物体的判断)区分开来。接下来,我们表明个体面部偏好主要源于每个个体独有的环境。这与面部身份识别中的个体差异形成了鲜明对比,面部身份识别的个体差异主要源于基因变异[1]。因此,我们在同一视觉刺激(面部)内完成了社会认知的两个核心领域(身份判断与吸引力判断)之间的病因学双重解离。同时,我们提供了一个行为遗传学中罕见的例子,即一种可靠且客观测量的行为特征,其变异主要由环境塑造。经验对个体面部偏好的巨大影响为社会大脑的进化和结构提供了一个新窗口,同时也为环境塑造个体对吸引力的观念这一长期主张提供了新的实证支持。