OBERZAUCHER, Elisabeth, Stanislav KATINA, I.J. HOLZLEITNER, S.F. SCHMEHL, I. MEHU-BLANTAR a K. GRAMMER. The myth of hidden ovulation: Shape and texture changes in the face during the menstrual cycle. Journal of Evolutionary Psychology. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 2012, roč. 10, č. 4, s. 163–175. ISSN 1789-2082. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1556/JEP.10.2012.4.1. |
Další formáty:
BibTeX
LaTeX
RIS
@article{1087984, author = {Oberzaucher, Elisabeth and Katina, Stanislav and Holzleitner, I.J. and Schmehl, S.F. and MehuandBlantar, I. and Grammer, K.}, article_location = {Budapest}, article_number = {4}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/JEP.10.2012.4.1}, keywords = {ovulation; facial attractiveness; symmetry; geometric morphometric methodology}, language = {eng}, issn = {1789-2082}, journal = {Journal of Evolutionary Psychology}, title = {The myth of hidden ovulation: Shape and texture changes in the face during the menstrual cycle}, url = {http://www.akademiai.com/content/120852/}, volume = {10}, year = {2012} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1087984 AU - Oberzaucher, Elisabeth - Katina, Stanislav - Holzleitner, I.J. - Schmehl, S.F. - Mehu-Blantar, I. - Grammer, K. PY - 2012 TI - The myth of hidden ovulation: Shape and texture changes in the face during the menstrual cycle JF - Journal of Evolutionary Psychology VL - 10 IS - 4 SP - 163–175 EP - 163–175 PB - Akadémiai Kiadó SN - 17892082 KW - ovulation KW - facial attractiveness KW - symmetry KW - geometric morphometric methodology UR - http://www.akademiai.com/content/120852/ L2 - http://www.akademiai.com/content/120852/ N2 - In recent years, evidence has been gathered indicating increased attractiveness of female faces at the point of ovulation. In this paper, we asked what changes in facial appearance occur during menstrual cycle that lead to this shift in attractiveness. We analysed facial photographs of 20 young women with a normal cycle. We found evidence for textural changes, as well as shape changes that might account for the ovulatory peak in attractiveness. Generally, facial shape at ovulation is perceived as more attractive – and ovulating women are perceived as more attractive the closer their face shape is to the “ovulation shape”. These findings support the hypothesis that attractive signals might be rooted in signals of fertility. ER -
OBERZAUCHER, Elisabeth, Stanislav KATINA, I.J. HOLZLEITNER, S.F. SCHMEHL, I. MEHU-BLANTAR a K. GRAMMER. The myth of hidden ovulation: Shape and texture changes in the face during the menstrual cycle. \textit{Journal of Evolutionary Psychology}. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 2012, roč.~10, č.~4, s.~163–175. ISSN~1789-2082. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1556/JEP.10.2012.4.1.
|