Human adaptations for the visual assessment of strength and fighting ability from the body and face
University of California, Santa Barbara
Abstract
Selection in species with aggressive social interactions favours the evolution of cognitive mechanisms for assessing physical formidability (fighting ability or resource-holding potential). The ability to accurately assess formidability in conspecifics has been documented in a number of non-human species, but has not been demonstrated in humans. Here, we report tests supporting the hypothesis that the human cognitive architecture includes mechanisms that assess fighting ability-mechanisms that focus on correlates of upper-body strength. Across diverse samples of targets that included US college students, Bolivian horticulturalists and Andean pastoralists, subjects in the US were able to accurately estimate the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.35
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 56
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Cognition
- Face (sociological concept)
- Physical strength
- Cognitive psychology
- Selection (genetic algorithm)
- Psychology
- Computer science
- Artificial intelligence