Is facial structure an honest cue to real-world dominance and fighting ability in men? A pre-registered direct replication of

NR Caton, SG Pearson, BJW Dixson - Evolution and Human Behavior, 2022 - Elsevier
Masculine facial morphology (eg, larger jaw, prominent cheekbones) have been linked to a
suite of social outcomes—including greater wealth, career progress, romantic desirability …

Further evidence for links between facial width‐to‐height ratio and fighting success: Commentary on Zilioli et al.(2014)

V Třebický, J Fialová, K Kleisner… - Aggressive …, 2015 - Wiley Online Library
Recent research has reported an association between facial width‐to‐height ratio (fWHR)
and both fighting performance and judgments of formidability in a sample of mixed martial …

Human perception of fighting ability: Facial cues predict winners and losers in mixed martial arts fights

AC Little, V Třebický, J Havlíček, SC Roberts… - Behavioral …, 2015 - academic.oup.com
In antagonistic encounters, the primary decision to be made is to fight or not. Animals may
then possess adaptations to assess fighting ability in their opponents. Previous studies …

Protective buttressing of the hominin face

DR Carrier, MH Morgan - Biological Reviews, 2015 - Wiley Online Library
When humans fight hand‐to‐hand the face is usually the primary target and the bones that
suffer the highest rates of fracture are the parts of the skull that exhibit the greatest increase …

A case of evolutionary mismatch? Why facial width-to-height ratio may not predict behavioral tendencies

D Wang, K Nair, M Kouchaki, EJ Zajac… - Psychological …, 2019 - journals.sagepub.com
This study contributes to the growing literature linking physical characteristics and
behavioral tendencies by advancing the current debate on whether a person's facial width-to …

Is facial width-to-height ratio reliably associated with social inferences?

PK Durkee, JD Ayers - Evolution and Human Behavior, 2021 - Elsevier
Theoretical considerations and early empirical findings suggested facial width-to-height ratio
(fWHR) may be relevant to person perception because it is associated with behavioral …

CEO facial masculinity and bank risk-taking

S Ahmed, J Sihvonen, S Vähämaa - Personality and Individual Differences, 2019 - Elsevier
Abstract This paper uses Chief Executive Officer (CEO) facial features to examine the
association between CEO masculinity and bank risk-taking. Given that high facial width-to …

Mirror, mirror on my phone: Investigating dimensions of self-face perception induced by augmented reality filters

R Fribourg, E Peillard… - 2021 IEEE International …, 2021 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
The main use of Augmented Reality (AR) today for the general public is in applications for
smartphones. In particular, social network applications allow the use of many AR filters …

[HTML][HTML] Interpretation of appearance: The effect of facial features on first impressions and personality

K Wolffhechel, J Fagertun, UP Jacobsen, W Majewski… - PloS one, 2014 - journals.plos.org
Appearance is known to influence social interactions, which in turn could potentially
influence personality development. In this study we focus on discovering the relationship …

Expectations of men's use of harsh parental discipline through formidability inferences.

M Brown, DF Sacco, S Donahoe… - Evolutionary …, 2024 - psycnet.apa.org
One modality to estimate men's formidability and aggressive proclivities is their facial width-
to-height ratio (fWHR). Such inferences may further influence perceptions of men as fathers …