Evaluating the respective weights of some facial signs on perceived ages in differently aged women of five ethnic origins

Background New gratification assessments, after skincare routines or makeup products, could benefit from innovative methods that could predict the culturally based perceptions of age. Aims To determine the facial signs that most influence the perception of age in women of five different ethnic ances...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cosmetic dermatology 2021-03, Vol.20 (3), p.842-853
Hauptverfasser: Flament, Frederic, Abric, Aurelie, Adam, Anne‐Sophie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background New gratification assessments, after skincare routines or makeup products, could benefit from innovative methods that could predict the culturally based perceptions of age. Aims To determine the facial signs that most influence the perception of age in women of five different ethnic ancestries, assessed by the same ethnical naïve panel. Patients/Methods The faces of 1351 women, differently aged (18‐80 years), from five countries (China, France, India, Japan, and South Africa) were photographed under the same standardized conditions in the five countries. Fourteen to 24 facial signs (grouped under five clusters, ie, Wrinkles/Texture, Ptosis/Sagging, Pigmentation disorders, Vascular disorders, and Cheeks skin pores) were focused, and their respective severities were graded using referential Skin Aging Atlases by the same panel of 15 experts and dermatologists. Five naïve panels, all comprising 100 local women, allowed to collect the perceived age, assessed from blind‐coded full‐face photographs. Results Although perceived ages and real ages were found highly correlated, their differences vary according to ethnicities, particularly among a large part of Indian and South African women, judged older by about 5 and 7 years, respectively. Results show that the clusters of Wrinkles/Texture and Ptosis/Sagging are predominant factors taken into account in almost all ethnicities, albeit at various extents, reaching almost 100% in French women. Pigmentation disorders appear important secondary factors in Japanese, South African, and Indian women. Vascular disorders, of a difficult grading in darker skin tones, were found of some impact in Japanese and Chinese women. Cheek skin pores were of minor or nil weight in the attribution of age, at the exception of South African women. Regarding facial areas which drive aging perception, it seems the upper‐half face has prevalence for Chinese and Japanese women whereas the lower‐half face has major importance for South African women. Conclusion Facial traits are differently perceived as signs of aging according to un‐separable ethnic ancestries and cultural factors.
ISSN:1473-2130
1473-2165
DOI:10.1111/jocd.13612