Article

Does Adult Sex Ratio Predict Regional Variation in Facial Dominance Perceptions? Evidence From an Analysis of U.S. States

Details

Citation

Torrance JS, Kandrik M, Lee AJ, DeBruine LM & Jones BC (2018) Does Adult Sex Ratio Predict Regional Variation in Facial Dominance Perceptions? Evidence From an Analysis of U.S. States. Evolutionary Psychology, 16 (2). https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704918776748

Abstract
When the adult sex ratio of the local population is biased toward women, men face greater costs due to increased direct intrasexual competition. In order to mitigate these costs, men may be more attuned to cues of other men’s physical dominance under these conditions. Consequently, we investigated the relationships between the extent to which people (N = 3,586) ascribed high dominance to masculinized versus feminized faces and variation in adult sex ratio across U.S. states. Linear mixed models showed that masculinized faces were perceived as more dominant than feminized faces, particularly for judgments of men’s facial dominance. Dominance perceptions were weakly related to adult sex ratio, and this relationship was not moderated by face sex, participant sex, or their interaction. Thus, our results suggest that dominance perceptions are relatively unaffected by broad geographical differences in adult sex ratios.

Keywords
social perceptions; face perceptions; dominance judgements; adult sex ratio; intrasexual competition

Journal
Evolutionary Psychology: Volume 16, Issue 2

StatusPublished
FundersEconomic and Social Research Council
Publication date30/06/2018
Publication date online03/06/2018
Date accepted by journal26/03/2018
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/28619
PublisherSAGE Publications
eISSN1474-7049

People (1)

Dr Anthony Lee

Dr Anthony Lee

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology