Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.
Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA, USA.
Aesthet Surg J. 2021 Sep 14;41(10):1207-1215. doi: 10.1093/asj/sjaa377.
The evaluation of gender-affirming facial feminization surgery (FFS) outcomes can be highly subjective, which has resulted in a limited understanding of the social perception of favorable gender and aesthetic facial appearance following FFS. Eye-tracking technology has introduced an objective measure of viewer subconscious gaze.
The aim of this study was to use eye-tracking technology to measure attention and perception of surgery-naive cisgender female and feminized transgender faces, based on viewer gender identity.
Thirty-two participants (18 cisgender and 14 transgender) were enrolled and shown 5 photographs each of surgery-naive cisgender female and feminized transgender faces. Gaze was captured with a Tobii Pro X2-60 eye-tracking device (Tobii, Stockholm, Sweden) and participants rated the gender and aesthetic appearance of each face on Likert-type scales.
Total image gaze fixation time did not differ by participant gender identity (6.00 vs 6.04 seconds, P = 0.889); however, transgender participants spent more time evaluating the forehead/brow, buccal/mandibular regions, and chin (P < 0.001). Multivariate regression analysis showed significant associations between viewer gender identity, age, race, and education, and the time spent evaluating gender salient facial features. Feminized faces were rated as more masculine with poorer aesthetic appearance than surgery-naive cisgender female faces; however, there was no significant difference in the distribution of gender appearance ratings assigned to each photograph by cisgender and transgender participants.
These results demonstrate that gender identity influences subconscious attention and gaze on female faces. Nevertheless, differences in gaze distribution did not correspond to subjective rated gender appearance for either surgery-naive cisgender female or feminized transgender faces, further illustrating the complexity of evaluating social perception of favorable FFS outcomes.
评估性别肯定面部整形手术(FFS)的结果可能具有高度主观性,这导致人们对 FFS 后性别和审美面部外观的社会认知了解有限。眼动追踪技术为观看者潜意识注视提供了一种客观的衡量标准。
本研究旨在使用眼动追踪技术,根据观看者的性别认同,测量手术前的顺性别女性和女性化跨性别者的面部的注意力和感知。
招募了 32 名参与者(18 名顺性别和 14 名跨性别者),并向他们展示了 5 张手术前的顺性别女性和女性化跨性别者的面部照片。使用 Tobii Pro X2-60 眼动追踪设备(Tobii,斯德哥尔摩,瑞典)捕捉注视,参与者使用李克特量表对每张面孔的性别和审美外观进行评分。
参与者的性别认同未影响总图像注视固定时间(6.00 秒与 6.04 秒,P = 0.889);然而,跨性别参与者在评估额/眉、颊/下颌和颏部花费的时间更多(P < 0.001)。多变量回归分析显示,观看者的性别认同、年龄、种族和教育与评估性别显著面部特征的时间之间存在显著关联。女性化的面孔被评定为比手术前的顺性别女性面孔更男性化,审美外观更差;然而,顺性别和跨性别参与者对每张照片分配的性别外观评分分布没有显著差异。
这些结果表明,性别认同会影响对女性面孔的潜意识注意和注视。然而,注视分布的差异与手术前的顺性别女性或女性化跨性别者的面部的主观评定性别外观不对应,进一步说明了评估对 FFS 结果的有利社会认知的复杂性。