Article

Children's Judgements of Facial Hair are Influenced by Biological Development and Experience

Details

Citation

Nelson NL, Kennedy-Costantini S, Lee AJ & Dixson BJW (2019) Children's Judgements of Facial Hair are Influenced by Biological Development and Experience. Evolution and Human Behavior, 40 (6), pp. 551-556. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2019.06.002

Abstract
Adults use features such as facial hair to judge others' social dominance and mate value, but the origin of these judgments is unknown. We sought to determine when these associations develop, which associations develop first, and whether they are associated with early exposure to bearded faces. We presented pairs of bearded and clean-shaven faces to children (2-17 years old; N=470) and adults (18-22 years; N = 164) and asked them to judge dominance traits (strength, age, masculinity) and mate choice traits (attractiveness, parenting quality). Young children associated beardedness with dominance traits but not mate choice traits. This pattern became more extreme during late childhood and gradually shifted toward adult-like responses during early adolescence. Responses for all traits were adult-like in late adolescence. Finally, having a bearded father was associated with positive judgments of bearded faces for mate choice traits in childhood and both mate choice and dominance traits in adolescence.

Keywords
face perception; child development; facial hair; dominance; evolution

Journal
Evolution and Human Behavior: Volume 40, Issue 6

StatusPublished
FundersAustralian Research Council
Publication date30/11/2019
Publication date online20/06/2019
Date accepted by journal13/06/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/29715
ISSN1090-5138

People (1)

People

Dr Anthony Lee

Dr Anthony Lee

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology