Department of Psychology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Institut des Sciences Cognitives Marc Jeannerod, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université Claude Bernard, Lyon 1, France.
PLoS One. 2023 Jul 25;18(7):e0289057. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0289057. eCollection 2023.
Infant facial attractiveness is an important facilitator for adult-infant caregiving behaviour. Disruption to typical infant facial configurations can, however, attenuate their perceived attractiveness, as rated by adult observers. Previous research has either focused on how ratings are affected by observer characteristics (e.g., male/female), or alterations to infant faces, either experimentally, or naturalistically induced, such as the presence of a cleft lip. Little research has however been conducted on the effects of observer experience on adult ratings of infant facial attractiveness. Such effects could inform clinical work and policies aimed at promoting positive perception of facial malformations. The present study thus explored the effects of familiarisation on how typical and atypical infant facial configurations are evaluated by adults. We recruited two groups of female participants and compared their subjective attractiveness ratings of infant faces (24 typical and 24 cleft-affected), at baseline, and at one-week post-test. Between the two assessments, one group (n = 41) underwent a week-long training phase, where they were familiarised with cleft lip/palate-related visual and informational stimuli, while the control group (n = 44) received no training. Significantly higher ratings were provided for faces of typically developing versus cleft-affected infants by both groups of participants at baseline. At post-test, this pattern of ratings was repeated in participants belonging to the control group, while familiarised participants showed an increase, compared to baseline, in their ratings of cleft-affected faces and no difference between their evaluation of the latter and that of typically developing faces. These findings extend our understanding of the observer's experience in the evaluation of infant faces, beyond the effects of the structural characteristics of the observed faces. Results also highlight familiarity as a potentially protective influence against the negative consequences of alterations to typical facial configurations, suggesting avenues for intervention in supporting adult caregivers in the context of neonatal facial malformations.
婴儿的面部吸引力是促进成人照顾婴儿行为的重要因素。然而,典型婴儿面部形态的破坏会降低其被成人观察者感知的吸引力。先前的研究要么关注观察者特征(例如男性/女性)如何影响评分,要么关注婴儿面部的变化,无论是通过实验还是自然诱导,例如唇裂的存在。然而,很少有研究关注观察者经验对成人对婴儿面部吸引力的评价的影响。这些影响可以为旨在促进对面部畸形的积极认知的临床工作和政策提供信息。因此,本研究探讨了熟悉度对成人如何评价典型和非典型婴儿面部形态的影响。我们招募了两组女性参与者,并在基线和一周后的测试中比较了他们对婴儿面部(24 个典型和 24 个唇裂)的主观吸引力评分。在两次评估之间,一组(n = 41)进行了为期一周的培训阶段,在此期间,他们熟悉了与唇裂/腭裂相关的视觉和信息刺激,而对照组(n = 44)没有接受培训。两组参与者在基线时都对正常发育的婴儿面部给予了更高的评分,而对唇裂婴儿的评分较低。在测试时,对照组参与者的评分模式重复出现,而熟悉组参与者对唇裂婴儿的评分与基线相比有所增加,对后者的评价与对正常发育婴儿的评价没有差异。这些发现扩展了我们对观察者在评估婴儿面部时的经验的理解,超越了观察到的面部结构特征的影响。结果还强调了熟悉度作为一种潜在的保护因素,可以防止典型面部形态变化带来的负面影响,这为在新生儿面部畸形的背景下为成人照顾者提供支持提供了干预途径。