This study sought to determine how esthetic appearance of babies may affect their motivational processing by the adults.Healthy men and women were administered two laboratory-based tasks: a) key pressing to change the viewing time of normal-looking babies and of those with abnormal facial features (e.g., cleft palate, strabismus, skin disorders, Down's syndrome and fetal alcohol syndrome) and b) attractiveness ratings of these images. Exposure to the babies' images produced two different response patterns: for normal babies, there was a similar effort by the two groups to extend the visual processing with lower attractiveness ratings by men; for abnormal babies, women exerted greater effort to shorten the viewing time despite attractiveness...
Publisher's PDF.Young infants are typically thought to prefer looking at smiling expressions. Althou...
Young infants are typically thought to prefer looking at smiling expressions. Although some accounts...
Infant cuteness can influence adult-infant interaction and has been shown to activate reward centres...
This study sought to determine how esthetic appearance of babies may affect their motivational proce...
Facial appearance can motivate behaviour and elicit activation of brain circuits putatively involved...
Infant facial features are thought to be powerful elicitors of caregiving behaviour. It has been wid...
Gender may be involved in the motivational processing of facial beauty. This study applied a behavio...
Infant cuteness can influence adult-infant interaction and has been shown to activate reward centres...
Facial attractiveness provides a very powerful motivation for sexual and parental behavior. We there...
Neonatal features in the newborn are thought to trigger parental care, the most fundamental prosocia...
We review the effects of reproductive hormones and observer gender on face appearance and perception...
Consistent attention and proper processing of infant faces by adults are essential for infant surviv...
This study investigated sex differences in interest in infants among chil-dren, adolescents, young a...
textTwo experiments investigated how the cues of attractiveness, masculinity, and averageness contri...
Infant facial features are typically perceived as “cute,” provoking caretaking behaviours. Previous ...
Publisher's PDF.Young infants are typically thought to prefer looking at smiling expressions. Althou...
Young infants are typically thought to prefer looking at smiling expressions. Although some accounts...
Infant cuteness can influence adult-infant interaction and has been shown to activate reward centres...
This study sought to determine how esthetic appearance of babies may affect their motivational proce...
Facial appearance can motivate behaviour and elicit activation of brain circuits putatively involved...
Infant facial features are thought to be powerful elicitors of caregiving behaviour. It has been wid...
Gender may be involved in the motivational processing of facial beauty. This study applied a behavio...
Infant cuteness can influence adult-infant interaction and has been shown to activate reward centres...
Facial attractiveness provides a very powerful motivation for sexual and parental behavior. We there...
Neonatal features in the newborn are thought to trigger parental care, the most fundamental prosocia...
We review the effects of reproductive hormones and observer gender on face appearance and perception...
Consistent attention and proper processing of infant faces by adults are essential for infant surviv...
This study investigated sex differences in interest in infants among chil-dren, adolescents, young a...
textTwo experiments investigated how the cues of attractiveness, masculinity, and averageness contri...
Infant facial features are typically perceived as “cute,” provoking caretaking behaviours. Previous ...
Publisher's PDF.Young infants are typically thought to prefer looking at smiling expressions. Althou...
Young infants are typically thought to prefer looking at smiling expressions. Although some accounts...
Infant cuteness can influence adult-infant interaction and has been shown to activate reward centres...