Shape of You: Eye-Tracking and Social Perceptions of the Human Body

Much research has considered how physical appearance affects the way people are judged, such as how body size affects judgements of attractiveness and health. Less research, however, has looked at visual attention during such judgements. We used eye-tracking to measure the gaze behaviour of 32 parti...

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Main Authors: Edward Morrison, Marianne Lanigan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-06-01
Series:Behavioral Sciences
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/15/6/817
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author Edward Morrison
Marianne Lanigan
author_facet Edward Morrison
Marianne Lanigan
author_sort Edward Morrison
collection DOAJ
description Much research has considered how physical appearance affects the way people are judged, such as how body size affects judgements of attractiveness and health. Less research, however, has looked at visual attention during such judgements. We used eye-tracking to measure the gaze behaviour of 32 participants (29 female) on male and female computer-generated bodies of different body mass index (BMI). Independent variables were sex and BMI of the model, area of interest of the body, and the judgement made (attractiveness, healthiness, and youthfulness). Dependent variables were the number and duration of fixations, and Likert ratings. Most visual attention was paid to the chest and midriff, but this pattern differed slightly depending on the judgement being made, and on the BMI of the body. The sex of the body also affected eye-gaze behaviour, possibly because most participants were female. The bodies at the lower end of healthy weight were judged most attractive and healthy, in line with previous research, but the lightest bodies were judged as most youthful. These results suggest that these social judgements cue similar but subtly different gaze behaviour, and broadly support the “health-and-fertility” hypothesis, that the most attractive bodies are those that indicate evolutionary fitness.
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spelling doaj-art-0a6b9bfdd5434b7595c19b2f3e79d8792025-08-20T03:26:53ZengMDPI AGBehavioral Sciences2076-328X2025-06-0115681710.3390/bs15060817Shape of You: Eye-Tracking and Social Perceptions of the Human BodyEdward Morrison0Marianne Lanigan1Centre for Comparative and Evolutionary Psychology, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 2UP, UKCentre for Comparative and Evolutionary Psychology, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 2UP, UKMuch research has considered how physical appearance affects the way people are judged, such as how body size affects judgements of attractiveness and health. Less research, however, has looked at visual attention during such judgements. We used eye-tracking to measure the gaze behaviour of 32 participants (29 female) on male and female computer-generated bodies of different body mass index (BMI). Independent variables were sex and BMI of the model, area of interest of the body, and the judgement made (attractiveness, healthiness, and youthfulness). Dependent variables were the number and duration of fixations, and Likert ratings. Most visual attention was paid to the chest and midriff, but this pattern differed slightly depending on the judgement being made, and on the BMI of the body. The sex of the body also affected eye-gaze behaviour, possibly because most participants were female. The bodies at the lower end of healthy weight were judged most attractive and healthy, in line with previous research, but the lightest bodies were judged as most youthful. These results suggest that these social judgements cue similar but subtly different gaze behaviour, and broadly support the “health-and-fertility” hypothesis, that the most attractive bodies are those that indicate evolutionary fitness.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/15/6/817eye-trackingBMIattractivenessyouthfulnesshealthinessbodies
spellingShingle Edward Morrison
Marianne Lanigan
Shape of You: Eye-Tracking and Social Perceptions of the Human Body
Behavioral Sciences
eye-tracking
BMI
attractiveness
youthfulness
healthiness
bodies
title Shape of You: Eye-Tracking and Social Perceptions of the Human Body
title_full Shape of You: Eye-Tracking and Social Perceptions of the Human Body
title_fullStr Shape of You: Eye-Tracking and Social Perceptions of the Human Body
title_full_unstemmed Shape of You: Eye-Tracking and Social Perceptions of the Human Body
title_short Shape of You: Eye-Tracking and Social Perceptions of the Human Body
title_sort shape of you eye tracking and social perceptions of the human body
topic eye-tracking
BMI
attractiveness
youthfulness
healthiness
bodies
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/15/6/817
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