Rowland Hannah M, Burriss Robert P
Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK
Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London, London NW1 4RY, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2017 Jul 5;372(1724). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2016.0350.
The colour of our skin and clothing affects how others perceive us and how we behave. Human skin colour varies conspicuously with genetic ancestry, but even subtle changes in skin colour due to diet, blood oxygenation and hormone levels influence social perceptions. In this review, we describe the theoretical and empirical frameworks in which human colour is researched. We explore how subtle skin colour differences relate to judgements of health and attractiveness. Also, because humans are one of the few organisms able to manipulate their apparent colour, we review how cosmetics and clothing are implicated in courtship and competition, both inside the laboratory and in the real world. Research on human colour is in its infancy compared with human psychophysics and colour research in non-human animals, and hence we present best-practice guidelines for methods and reporting, which we hope will improve the validity and reproducibility of studies on human coloration.This article is part of the themed issue 'Animal coloration: production, perception, function and application'.
我们皮肤和衣物的颜色会影响他人对我们的看法以及我们的行为举止。人类的肤色因遗传血统而有显著差异,但即使是因饮食、血液氧合作用和激素水平导致的肤色细微变化,也会影响社会认知。在这篇综述中,我们描述了研究人类肤色的理论和实证框架。我们探讨了细微的肤色差异如何与健康和吸引力的判断相关联。此外,由于人类是少数能够改变自身表观颜色的生物之一,我们回顾了化妆品和衣物在实验室环境及现实世界中的求爱和竞争行为中所起的作用。与人类心理物理学以及非人类动物的颜色研究相比,关于人类肤色的研究尚处于起步阶段,因此我们提出了方法和报告的最佳实践指南,希望能提高有关人类肤色研究的有效性和可重复性。本文是主题为“动物的颜色:产生、感知、功能及应用”特刊的一部分。