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Vulnerability of facial attractiveness perception to early and multi-year visual deprivation
Authors:Priti Gupta  Pragya Shah  Swochchhanda Shrestha  Sharon Gilad-Gutnick  Suma Ganesh  Tapan Gandhi  Pawan Sinha
Institution:1. Amarnath and Shashi Khosla School of Information Technology, Indian Institute of Technology, New Delhi, India;2. Institute of Human Behaviour and Allied Sciences, New Delhi, India;3. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA;4. Department of Pediatric Ophthalmology, Dr. 5. Shroff's Charity Eye Hospital, New Delhi, India;6. Department of Electrical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, New Delhi, India
Abstract:Judgments of facial attractiveness invariably accompany our perception of faces. Even neonates appear to be capable of making such judgments in a manner consistent with adults. This suggests that the processes supporting facial attractiveness require little, if any, visual experience to manifest. Here we investigate the resilience of these processes to several years of early-onset visual deprivation. Specifically, we study whether congenitally blind children treated several years after birth possess the ability to rate facial attractiveness in a manner congruent to normally sighted individuals. The data reveal significant individual variability in the way each newly sighted child perceives attractiveness. This is in marked contrast to data from normally sighted controls who exhibit strong across-subject agreement in facial attractiveness ratings. This variability may be attributable, in part, to atypical facial encoding strategies used by the newly sighted children. Overall, our results suggest that the development of facial attractiveness perception is likely to be vulnerable to early visual deprivation, pointing to the existence of a possible sensitive period early in the developmental trajectory.
Keywords:congenital blindness  early visual experience  facial attractiveness perception  late sight onset  perceptual development  sensitive periods of development
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