Sexual Selection, Agonistic Signaling, and the Effect of Beards on Recognition of Men's Anger Displays

Title
Sexual Selection, Agonistic Signaling, and the Effect of Beards on Recognition of Men's Anger Displays
Publication Date
2019-05
Author(s)
Craig, Belinda M
Nelson, Nicole L
Dixson, Barnaby J W
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Sage Publications, Inc
Place of publication
United States of America
DOI
10.1177/0956797619834876
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/27757
Abstract
The beard is arguably one of the most obvious signals of masculinity in humans. Almost 150 years ago, Darwin suggested that beards evolved to communicate formidability to other males, but no studies have investigated whether beards enhance recognition of threatening expressions, such as anger. We found that the presence of a beard increased the speed and accuracy with which participants recognized displays of anger but not happiness (Experiment 1, N = 219). This effect was not due to negative evaluations shared by beardedness and anger or to negative stereotypes associated with beardedness, as beards did not facilitate recognition of another negative expression, sadness (Experiment 2, N = 90), and beards increased the rated prosociality of happy faces in addition to the rated masculinity and aggressiveness of angry faces (Experiment 3, N = 445). A computer-based emotion classifier reproduced the influence of beards on emotion recognition (Experiment 4). The results suggest that beards may alter perceived facial structure, facilitating rapid judgments of anger in ways that conform to evolutionary theory.
Link
Citation
Psychological Science, 30(5), p. 728-738
ISSN
1467-9280
0956-7976
Pubmed ID
30908116
Start page
728
End page
738

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