Authors
Brian M Bird, Valeska S Cid Jofré, Shawn N Geniole, Keith M Welker, Samuele Zilioli, Dario Maestripieri, Steven Arnocky, Justin M Carre
Publication date
2016/9/1
Journal
Evolution and Human Behavior
Volume
37
Issue
5
Pages
392-398
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Variation in the facial width-to-height ratio (fWHR) maps onto a number of behavioral and psychological traits among men (e.g., aggression, unethical behavior, negotiation performance). Importantly, observer judgments of many of these traits also correlate strongly with the fWHR, suggesting that it may represent an honest cue to dominance and status. It has been speculated that the relationship between fWHR and these behavioral traits is due to pubertal testosterone concurrently shaping facial structure and traits linked to social dominance. Others, however, have provided some initial, although inconsistent, evidence that circulating testosterone levels in adulthood may underlie associations between the fWHR and behavioral displays. Here, we provide a more powerful test of the second model by examining the relationship between fWHR, baseline testosterone, and competition-induced testosterone reactivity …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
BM Bird, VSC Jofré, SN Geniole, KM Welker, S Zilioli… - Evolution and Human Behavior, 2016