Perception of facial attractiveness requires some attentional resources: implications for the “automaticity” of psychological adaptations

Abstract Traditional criteria for modularity assert that perceptual adaptations for processing evolutionarily important stimuli should operate “automatically” in the sense of requiring no central attentional resources. Here, we test the validity of this automaticity criterion by assessing the attent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Evolution and human behavior 2012-05, Vol.33 (3), p.241-250
Hauptverfasser: Jung, Kyunghun, Ruthruff, Eric, Tybur, Joshua M, Gaspelin, Nicholas, Miller, Geoffrey
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container_end_page 250
container_issue 3
container_start_page 241
container_title Evolution and human behavior
container_volume 33
creator Jung, Kyunghun
Ruthruff, Eric
Tybur, Joshua M
Gaspelin, Nicholas
Miller, Geoffrey
description Abstract Traditional criteria for modularity assert that perceptual adaptations for processing evolutionarily important stimuli should operate “automatically” in the sense of requiring no central attentional resources. Here, we test the validity of this automaticity criterion by assessing the attentional demands of a well-studied perceptual adaptation: judgment of facial attractiveness. We used locus-of-slack logic in a dual-task psychological refractory period paradigm, where Task 1 was a speeded judgment of tone pitch (low vs. high), and Task 2 was a speeded judgment of whether a face was attractive or unattractive, with the Task-2 judgment manipulated to have a low or a high difficulty level. In two studies ( N =36 and N =73 female participants; 384 trials each), the Task 2 difficulty effects were additive with stimulus-onset asynchronies (100, 300, 500 or 900 ms) on Task 2 response times. According to the locus-of-slack logic, this result implies that participants could not discriminate facial attractiveness level, while their central attentional resources were still occupied by Task 1. If the human capacity for perceiving facial attractiveness—a premier example of an adaptation—does not show automaticity in this sense, automaticity may not be a useful criterion for identifying psychological adaptations.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2011.10.001
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source Sociological Abstracts; Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects Attention
Attractiveness
Automaticity
Biological anthropology
Chronometrics
Cognition
Dual task
Facial attractiveness
Facial expressions
Females
Human evolution
Mate selection
Modularity
Perception of others
Physical appearance
Psychiatry
Psychological Theories
Psychology
Sexual behaviour
Stimuli
Trials
title Perception of facial attractiveness requires some attentional resources: implications for the “automaticity” of psychological adaptations
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