Article

Exposure to visual cues of pathogen contagion changes preferences for masculinity and symmetry in opposite-sex faces

Details

Citation

Little A, DeBruine LM & Jones BC (2011) Exposure to visual cues of pathogen contagion changes preferences for masculinity and symmetry in opposite-sex faces. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 278 (1714), pp. 2032-2039. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2010.1925

Abstract
Evolutionary approaches to human attractiveness have documented several traits that are proposed to be attractive across individuals and cultures, although both cross-individual and cross-cultural variations are also often found. Previous studies show that parasite prevalence and mortality/health are related to cultural variation in preferences for attractive traits. Visual experience of pathogen cues may mediate such variable preferences. Here we showed individuals slideshows of images with cues to low and high pathogen prevalence and measured their visual preferences for face traits. We found that both men and women moderated their preferences for facial masculinity and symmetry according to recent experience of visual cues to environmental pathogens. Change in preferences was seen mainly for opposite-sex faces, with women preferring more masculine and more symmetric male faces and men preferring more feminine and more symmetric female faces after exposure to pathogen cues than when not exposed to such cues. Cues to environmental pathogens had no significant effects on preferences for same-sex faces. These data complement studies of cross-cultural differences in preferences by suggesting a mechanism for variation in mate preferences. Similar visual experience could lead to within-cultural agreement and differing visual experience could lead to cross-cultural variation. Overall, our data demonstrate that preferences can be strategically flexible according to recent visual experience with pathogen cues. Given that cues to pathogens may signal an increase in contagion/mortality risk, it may be adaptive to shift visual preferences in favour of proposed good-gene markers in environments where such cues are more evident.

Keywords
sexual dimorphism; asymmetry; attractiveness; pathogens; disease; variation

Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences: Volume 278, Issue 1714

StatusPublished
Publication date31/07/2011
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/17699
PublisherThe Royal Society
ISSN0962-8452
eISSN1471-2954

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