The Effect of Romantic Relationships on the Evaluation of the Attractiveness of One’s Own Face
The present study sought to explore the effect of romantic relationships on the attractiveness evaluation of one’s own face using two experiments with the probability evaluation and the subjective rating method. Experiment 1 and Experiment 2 enrolled couples and single individuals as participants, r...
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2018-04-01
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Series: | i-Perception |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669518765542 |
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doaj-151688d350114068ab29b244b70fcd292020-11-25T02:59:51ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952018-04-01910.1177/2041669518765542The Effect of Romantic Relationships on the Evaluation of the Attractiveness of One’s Own FaceJiaye CaiYan ZhengPei LiBin YeHongyan LiuLiezhong GeThe present study sought to explore the effect of romantic relationships on the attractiveness evaluation of one’s own face using two experiments with the probability evaluation and the subjective rating method. Experiment 1 and Experiment 2 enrolled couples and single individuals as participants, respectively. The results of the two experiments indicated that the participants evaluated their own face as significantly more attractive than did others of the same sex. More importantly, the romantic relationship enhanced the positive bias in the evaluation of self-face attractiveness, that is, couple participants showed a stronger positive bias than did single individuals. It was also found that a person in a romantic relationship was prone to overestimating the attractiveness of his or her lover’s face, from the perspective of both probability evaluation and rating score. However, the abovementioned overestimation did not surpass the evaluations of the exaggeratedly attractive face. The present results supported the observer hypothesis, demonstrating the romantic relationship to be an important influential factor of facial attractiveness. Our findings have important implications for the research of self-face evaluation.https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669518765542 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jiaye Cai Yan Zheng Pei Li Bin Ye Hongyan Liu Liezhong Ge |
spellingShingle |
Jiaye Cai Yan Zheng Pei Li Bin Ye Hongyan Liu Liezhong Ge The Effect of Romantic Relationships on the Evaluation of the Attractiveness of One’s Own Face i-Perception |
author_facet |
Jiaye Cai Yan Zheng Pei Li Bin Ye Hongyan Liu Liezhong Ge |
author_sort |
Jiaye Cai |
title |
The Effect of Romantic Relationships on the Evaluation of the Attractiveness of One’s Own Face |
title_short |
The Effect of Romantic Relationships on the Evaluation of the Attractiveness of One’s Own Face |
title_full |
The Effect of Romantic Relationships on the Evaluation of the Attractiveness of One’s Own Face |
title_fullStr |
The Effect of Romantic Relationships on the Evaluation of the Attractiveness of One’s Own Face |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Effect of Romantic Relationships on the Evaluation of the Attractiveness of One’s Own Face |
title_sort |
effect of romantic relationships on the evaluation of the attractiveness of one’s own face |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
i-Perception |
issn |
2041-6695 |
publishDate |
2018-04-01 |
description |
The present study sought to explore the effect of romantic relationships on the attractiveness evaluation of one’s own face using two experiments with the probability evaluation and the subjective rating method. Experiment 1 and Experiment 2 enrolled couples and single individuals as participants, respectively. The results of the two experiments indicated that the participants evaluated their own face as significantly more attractive than did others of the same sex. More importantly, the romantic relationship enhanced the positive bias in the evaluation of self-face attractiveness, that is, couple participants showed a stronger positive bias than did single individuals. It was also found that a person in a romantic relationship was prone to overestimating the attractiveness of his or her lover’s face, from the perspective of both probability evaluation and rating score. However, the abovementioned overestimation did not surpass the evaluations of the exaggeratedly attractive face. The present results supported the observer hypothesis, demonstrating the romantic relationship to be an important influential factor of facial attractiveness. Our findings have important implications for the research of self-face evaluation. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669518765542 |
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