Title
Calibrating facial morphs for use as stimuli in biological studies of social perception
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Abstract
Studies of human social perception become more persuasive when the behavior of raters can be separated from the variability of the stimuli they are rating. We prototype such a rigorous analysis for a set of five social ratings of faces varying by body fat percentage (BFP). 274 raters of both sexes in three age groups (adolescent, young adult, senior) rated five morphs of the same averaged facial image warped to the positions of 72 landmarks and semilandmarks predicted by linear regression on BFP at five different levels (the average, ±2 SD, ±5 SD). Each subject rated all five morphs for maturity, dominance, masculinity, attractiveness, and health. The patterns of dependence of ratings on the BFP calibration differ for the different ratings, but not substantially across the six groups of raters. This has implications for theories of social perception, specifically, the relevance of individual rater scale anchoring. The method is also highly relevant for other studies on how biological facial variation affects ratings.
Keywords
Biological anthropologyHuman behaviourStatistical methods
Object type
Language
English [eng]
Persistent identifier
https://phaidra.univie.ac.at/o:931131
Appeared in
Title
Scientific Reports
Volume
8
Publisher
Springer Nature
Date issued
2018
Access rights
Rights statement
© The Author(s) 2018

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