The Impact of Perceived Physical Resemblance on Ascriptions of Close Relationships of Siblings, Friends, and Romantic Partners

IF 1.5 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, BIOLOGICAL
Susan M. Hughes, Cecelia K. Ensell
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

AbstractSection Purpose

This study experimentally tested the impact of perceived physical resemblance on ascriptions of close relationships between individuals. Following kin selection theory, if physical resemblance is a proxy for genetic relatedness, it is adaptive to act altruistically toward similar-looking individuals who may share genes in common, yet select dissimilar-appearing romantic partners to avoid mating that may result in inbreeding depression or lack of offspring diversity.

AbstractSection Methods

Participants were shown sets of paired facial photos of two persons varying in physical resemblance to one another, who were labeled as being either friends, siblings, or romantic partners. Raters evaluated the closeness of each pair’s relationship based on their pictures. Another set of raters was shown the same pairs of photos without relationship labels and was asked to evaluate how likely they thought the pairs were siblings, friends, or romantic partners, respectively.

AbstractSection Results

Across all conditions, pairs exhibiting greater perceived physical resemblance were rated as having closer/higher-quality relationships and were more likely thought to be siblings or friends, but were less likely seen as romantic partners. Similar patterns were found when participants (n = 526) were asked about their own personal relationships; generally, ratings of both perceived physical and behavioral similarity were positively associated with perceived relationship closeness across all relationship types, even when controlling for factors such as relationship length and residence distance.

AbstractSection Conclusion

In line with kin selection theory, participants ascribed closer relationships to those who appeared more genetically related but were less likely to identify similar-looking pairs as being romantic partners.

Abstract Image

感知到的身体相似性对兄弟姐妹、朋友和浪漫伴侣的亲密关系的影响
摘要目的本研究通过实验检验了外貌相似性感知对亲密关系归属的影响。根据亲缘选择理论,如果身体上的相似性是遗传亲缘关系的代表,那么对具有共同基因的长相相似的个体利他行为是适应性的,但选择长相不同的浪漫伴侣以避免可能导致近亲繁殖抑制或后代多样性缺乏的交配。研究人员向参与者展示了两组长相相似的人的面部照片,这些人被标记为朋友、兄弟姐妹或恋人。评分者根据他们的照片来评估每对情侣的亲密程度。另一组评分者看了同样几对没有关系标签的照片,并被要求分别评估他们认为这几对照片是兄弟姐妹、朋友还是恋人的可能性。在所有条件下,表现出更相似外表的人被认为拥有更亲密/更高质量的关系,更有可能被认为是兄弟姐妹或朋友,但不太可能被视为恋人。当参与者(n = 526)被问及他们自己的个人关系时,也发现了类似的模式;一般来说,在所有关系类型中,感知到的身体和行为相似性的评分与感知到的关系亲密度呈正相关,即使在控制关系长度和居住距离等因素时也是如此。根据亲缘选择理论,参与者认为那些在基因上更有亲缘关系,但不太可能将长相相似的人视为恋人的人关系更密切。
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来源期刊
Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology
Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology PSYCHOLOGY, BIOLOGICAL-
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology is an international interdisciplinary scientific journal that publishes theoretical and empirical studies of any aspects of adaptive human behavior (e.g. cooperation, affiliation, and bonding, competition and aggression, sex and relationships, parenting, decision-making), with emphasis on studies that also address the biological (e.g. neural, endocrine, immune, cardiovascular, genetic) mechanisms controlling behavior.
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