Binocular Symmetry/Asymmetry of Scleral Redness as a Cue for Sadness, Healthiness, and Attractiveness in Humans

Among primates, only humans have the white sclerae that provide the ground necessary to display their own color and that of the overlying conjunctiva. Scleral color, primarily redness, provides cues of socially and biologically significant information about an individual. The present study examines...

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Main Authors: Robert R. Provine, Marcello O. Cabrera, Jessica Nave-Blodgett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-10-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491301100411
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spelling doaj-2406217ef1524d8ba2e9a4649e3dc8902020-11-25T03:15:33ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492013-10-011110.1177/14747049130110041110.1177_147470491301100411Binocular Symmetry/Asymmetry of Scleral Redness as a Cue for Sadness, Healthiness, and Attractiveness in HumansRobert R. ProvineMarcello O. CabreraJessica Nave-BlodgettAmong primates, only humans have the white sclerae that provide the ground necessary to display their own color and that of the overlying conjunctiva. Scleral color, primarily redness, provides cues of socially and biologically significant information about an individual. The present study examines the effect of the asymmetry of binocular scleral redness on perceived sadness, healthiness, and attractiveness by contrasting ratings of images of individuals who had one, both, or neither sclera reddened by digital editing. Building upon previous research, this study further defines the details of the scleral color display and contributes to the more general issue of facial and body symmetry, predictors of phenotypic condition and genotypic quality that are of interest to evolutionary theorists. Individuals with binocular and monocular redness were rated as sadder, less healthy, and less attractive than those with untinted control sclerae, with ratings corresponding to the degree of redness or whiteness. Bilaterally symmetrical (binocular) scleral redness or whiteness provided anchorage points for ratings, with ratings for bilaterally asymmetrical (monocular) redness or whiteness falling between them; there was no unique effect of asymmetry.https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491301100411
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert R. Provine
Marcello O. Cabrera
Jessica Nave-Blodgett
spellingShingle Robert R. Provine
Marcello O. Cabrera
Jessica Nave-Blodgett
Binocular Symmetry/Asymmetry of Scleral Redness as a Cue for Sadness, Healthiness, and Attractiveness in Humans
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Robert R. Provine
Marcello O. Cabrera
Jessica Nave-Blodgett
author_sort Robert R. Provine
title Binocular Symmetry/Asymmetry of Scleral Redness as a Cue for Sadness, Healthiness, and Attractiveness in Humans
title_short Binocular Symmetry/Asymmetry of Scleral Redness as a Cue for Sadness, Healthiness, and Attractiveness in Humans
title_full Binocular Symmetry/Asymmetry of Scleral Redness as a Cue for Sadness, Healthiness, and Attractiveness in Humans
title_fullStr Binocular Symmetry/Asymmetry of Scleral Redness as a Cue for Sadness, Healthiness, and Attractiveness in Humans
title_full_unstemmed Binocular Symmetry/Asymmetry of Scleral Redness as a Cue for Sadness, Healthiness, and Attractiveness in Humans
title_sort binocular symmetry/asymmetry of scleral redness as a cue for sadness, healthiness, and attractiveness in humans
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2013-10-01
description Among primates, only humans have the white sclerae that provide the ground necessary to display their own color and that of the overlying conjunctiva. Scleral color, primarily redness, provides cues of socially and biologically significant information about an individual. The present study examines the effect of the asymmetry of binocular scleral redness on perceived sadness, healthiness, and attractiveness by contrasting ratings of images of individuals who had one, both, or neither sclera reddened by digital editing. Building upon previous research, this study further defines the details of the scleral color display and contributes to the more general issue of facial and body symmetry, predictors of phenotypic condition and genotypic quality that are of interest to evolutionary theorists. Individuals with binocular and monocular redness were rated as sadder, less healthy, and less attractive than those with untinted control sclerae, with ratings corresponding to the degree of redness or whiteness. Bilaterally symmetrical (binocular) scleral redness or whiteness provided anchorage points for ratings, with ratings for bilaterally asymmetrical (monocular) redness or whiteness falling between them; there was no unique effect of asymmetry.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491301100411
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