Evaluation of facial attractiveness from end-of-treatment facial photographs

Introduction: Orthodontists typically make judgments of facial attractiveness by examining groupings of profile, full-face, and smiling photographs considered together as a “triplet.” The primary objective of this study was to determine the relative contributions of the 3 photographs—each considered...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of orthodontics and dentofacial orthopedics 2008-04, Vol.133 (4), p.500-508
Hauptverfasser: Shafiee, Roxanne, Korn, Edward L, Pearson, Helmer, Boyd, Robert L, Baumrind, Sheldon
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction: Orthodontists typically make judgments of facial attractiveness by examining groupings of profile, full-face, and smiling photographs considered together as a “triplet.” The primary objective of this study was to determine the relative contributions of the 3 photographs—each considered separately—to the overall judgment a clinician forms by examining the combination of the 3. Methods: End-of-treatment triplet orthodontic photographs of 45 randomly selected orthodontic patients were duplicated. Copies of the profile, full-face, and smiling images were generated, and the images were separated and then pooled by image type for all subjects. Ten judges ranked the 45 photographs of each image type for facial attractiveness in groups of 9 to 12, from “most attractive” to “least attractive.” Each judge also ranked the triplet groupings for the same 45 subjects. The mean attractiveness rankings for each type of photograph were then correlated with the mean rankings of each other and the triplets. Results: The rankings of the 3 image types correlated highly with each other and the rankings of the triplets ( P
ISSN:0889-5406
1097-6752
DOI:10.1016/j.ajodo.2006.04.048