Quinto-Sánchez Mirsha, Cintas Celia, Silva de Cerqueira Caio Cesar, Ramallo Virginia, Acuña-Alonzo Victor, Adhikari Kaustubh, Castillo Lucía, Gomez-Valdés Jorge, Everardo Paola, De Avila Francisco, Hünemeier Tábita, Jaramillo Claudia, Arias Williams, Fuentes Macarena, Gallo Carla, Poletti Giovani, Schuler-Faccini Lavinia, Bortolini Maria Cátira, Canizales-Quinteros Samuel, Rothhammer Francisco, Bedoya Gabriel, Rosique Javier, Ruiz-Linares Andrés, González-José Rolando
Grupo de Investigación en Biología Evolutiva Humana, Instituto Patagónico de Ciencias Sociales y Humanas, Centro Nacional Patagónico, CONICET. Puerto Madryn, Chubut, Argentina.
Ciencia Forense, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad de México, México.
PLoS One. 2017 Jan 6;12(1):e0169287. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169287. eCollection 2017.
The expression of facial asymmetries has been recurrently related with poverty and/or disadvantaged socioeconomic status. Departing from the developmental instability theory, previous approaches attempted to test the statistical relationship between the stress experienced by individuals grown in poor conditions and an increase in facial and corporal asymmetry. Here we aim to further evaluate such hypothesis on a large sample of admixed Latin Americans individuals by exploring if low socioeconomic status individuals tend to exhibit greater facial fluctuating asymmetry values. To do so, we implement Procrustes analysis of variance and Hierarchical Linear Modelling (HLM) to estimate potential associations between facial fluctuating asymmetry values and socioeconomic status. We report significant relationships between facial fluctuating asymmetry values and age, sex, and genetic ancestry, while socioeconomic status failed to exhibit any strong statistical relationship with facial asymmetry. These results are persistent after the effect of heterozygosity (a proxy for genetic ancestry) is controlled in the model. Our results indicate that, at least on the studied sample, there is no relationship between socioeconomic stress (as intended as low socioeconomic status) and facial asymmetries.
面部不对称的表现一直与贫困和/或社会经济地位不利相关。基于发育不稳定性理论,以往的研究试图检验在贫困环境中成长的个体所经历的压力与面部和身体不对称增加之间的统计关系。在此,我们旨在通过探究社会经济地位较低的个体是否倾向于表现出更大的面部波动不对称值,对大量拉丁裔混血个体样本进一步评估这一假设。为此,我们采用方差的普氏分析和分层线性模型(HLM)来估计面部波动不对称值与社会经济地位之间的潜在关联。我们报告了面部波动不对称值与年龄、性别和遗传血统之间存在显著关系,而社会经济地位与面部不对称未表现出任何强烈的统计关系。在模型中控制杂合性(遗传血统的一个代理指标)的影响后,这些结果依然存在。我们的结果表明,至少在所研究的样本中,社会经济压力(如低社会经济地位)与面部不对称之间没有关系。