Brain systems for assessing facial attractiveness

Attractiveness is a facial attribute that shapes human affiliative behaviours. In a previous study we reported a linear response to facial attractiveness in orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), a region involved in reward processing. There are strong theoretical grounds for the hypothesis that coding stimulu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuropsychologia 2007-01, Vol.45 (1), p.195-206
Hauptverfasser: Winston, Joel S., O’Doherty, John, Kilner, James M., Perrett, David I., Dolan, Raymond J.
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O’Doherty, John
Kilner, James M.
Perrett, David I.
Dolan, Raymond J.
description Attractiveness is a facial attribute that shapes human affiliative behaviours. In a previous study we reported a linear response to facial attractiveness in orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), a region involved in reward processing. There are strong theoretical grounds for the hypothesis that coding stimulus reward value also involves the amygdala. The aim of the present investigation is to address whether the amygdala is also sensitive to reward value in faces, indexed as facial attractiveness. We hypothesized that contrary to the linear effects reported previously in OFC, the amygdala would show a non-linear effect of attractiveness by responding to both high and low attractive faces relative to middle attractive faces. Such a non-linear response would explain previous failures to report an amygdala response to attractiveness. Human subjects underwent fMRI while they were presented with faces that varied in facial attractiveness where the task was either to rate faces for facial attractiveness or for age. Consistent with our hypothesis, right amygdala showed a predicted non-linear response profile with greater responses to highly attractive and unattractive faces compared to middle-ranked faces, independent of task. Distinct patterns of activity were seen across different regions of OFC, with some sectors showing linear effects of attractiveness, others exhibiting a non-linear response profile and still others demonstrating activation only during age judgments. Significant effects were also seen in medial prefrontal and paracingulate cortices, posterior OFC, insula, and superior temporal sulcus during explicit attractiveness judgments. The non-linear response profile of the amygdala is consistent with a role in sensing the value of social stimuli, a function that may also involve specific sectors of the OFC.
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subjects Adult
Amygdala
Anatomical correlates of behavior
Behavioral psychophysiology
Biological and medical sciences
Brain - physiology
Brain Hemisphere Functions
Cognitive Processes
Data Interpretation, Statistical
Deception
Diagnostic Tests
Esthetics - psychology
Face
Face processing
Female
Functional Laterality - physiology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Human Body
Humans
Interpersonal Attraction
Interpersonal Communication
Interpersonal Relationship
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Nonlinear Dynamics
Orbitofrontal cortex
Prediction
Prefrontal Cortex - physiology
Profiles
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Reaction Time - physiology
Reward
Rewards
Role
Social judgment
title Brain systems for assessing facial attractiveness
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