Experimental data: face preferences versus actual partner choice

DOI

Data from couples and longitudinal experimental tests, assessing face preferences for chosing the healthier, more dimorphic, more symmetric, and more average face. Preferences were assessed via two-alternative-forced-choice preference tasks, and consider masculinity and femininity, average-ness, symmetry, skin health, and similarity preferences.What makes one person find a face very attractive while another person finds the same face average? Studies of face preferences using computer graphic techniques to make faces more or less masculine, symmetric, healthy, distinctive or similar to self are helping to answer this question. However, these studies assume that preferences determined by judging the attractiveness of unfamiliar computer-manipulated faces will correspond to the types of partners that these people actually choose. We will test this assumption by examining whether or not preferences for facial masculinity, symmetry, health, distinctiveness and similarity to self that are determined from experimental methods correspond to measurements of these traits in partners' faces. We will also investigate whether more attractive people are better able to attract partners that are close to their ideal preferences. Finally, a two-year prospective study will investigate the face preferences of people both before and after they meet a new partner to determine if matches between experimentally-determined preferences and actual partner characteristics are caused by changing preferences to match a partner's traits rather than choosing a partner to match existing preferences. These studies are essential to determine how the results of experimental studies of face preferences apply to real-world partner choice.

Experimental preference data derived from visual preference and rating tasks. The data represent from participant face preferences for the cross-sectional (CP1) and longitudinal (CP2) projects. All face preferences are scores as the percentage of 10 face pairs on which the participant chose the healthier/more dimorphic/more symmetric/more average face. Contact the data contact person for access to the stimuli for these face preference tests, as no ethical approval was obtained to deposit those.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-851968
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=37e3f83b20714540cf99bc9e938cf9f67cb0352337fd8e30ef22b797bada5acf
Provenance
Creator DeBruine, L, University of Glasgow
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2017
Funding Reference ESRC
Rights Lisa DeBruine, University of Glasgow; The Data Collection is available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Numeric
Discipline Psychology; Social and Behavioural Sciences
Spatial Coverage Aberdeen, UK and Glasgow, UK; United Kingdom