Negative effects of restricted sleep on facial appearance and social appeal

The importance of assessing evolutionarily relevant social cues suggests that humans should be sensitive to others' sleep history, as this may indicate something about their health as well as their capacity for social interaction. Recent findings show that acute sleep deprivation and looking ti...

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Main Authors: Tina Sundelin, Mats Lekander, Kimmo Sorjonen, John Axelsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160918
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spelling doaj-98e2dc7b6a6d46e39e01920966529f862020-11-25T03:06:41ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-014510.1098/rsos.160918160918Negative effects of restricted sleep on facial appearance and social appealTina SundelinMats LekanderKimmo SorjonenJohn AxelssonThe importance of assessing evolutionarily relevant social cues suggests that humans should be sensitive to others' sleep history, as this may indicate something about their health as well as their capacity for social interaction. Recent findings show that acute sleep deprivation and looking tired are related to decreased attractiveness and health, as perceived by others. This suggests that one might also avoid contact with sleep-deprived, or sleepy-looking, individuals, as a strategy to reduce health risk and poor interactions. In this study, 25 participants (14 females, age range 18–47 years) were photographed after 2 days of sleep restriction and after normal sleep, in a balanced design. The photographs were rated by 122 raters (65 females, age range 18–65 years) on how much they would like to socialize with the participants. They also rated participants' attractiveness, health, sleepiness and trustworthiness. The results show that raters were less inclined to socialize with individuals who had gotten insufficient sleep. Furthermore, when sleep-restricted, participants were perceived as less attractive, less healthy and more sleepy. There was no difference in perceived trustworthiness. These findings suggest that naturalistic sleep loss can be detected in a face and that people are less inclined to interact with a sleep-deprived individual.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160918sleepsleep restrictionfacesattractivenesssocial appealsleepiness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tina Sundelin
Mats Lekander
Kimmo Sorjonen
John Axelsson
spellingShingle Tina Sundelin
Mats Lekander
Kimmo Sorjonen
John Axelsson
Negative effects of restricted sleep on facial appearance and social appeal
Royal Society Open Science
sleep
sleep restriction
faces
attractiveness
social appeal
sleepiness
author_facet Tina Sundelin
Mats Lekander
Kimmo Sorjonen
John Axelsson
author_sort Tina Sundelin
title Negative effects of restricted sleep on facial appearance and social appeal
title_short Negative effects of restricted sleep on facial appearance and social appeal
title_full Negative effects of restricted sleep on facial appearance and social appeal
title_fullStr Negative effects of restricted sleep on facial appearance and social appeal
title_full_unstemmed Negative effects of restricted sleep on facial appearance and social appeal
title_sort negative effects of restricted sleep on facial appearance and social appeal
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The importance of assessing evolutionarily relevant social cues suggests that humans should be sensitive to others' sleep history, as this may indicate something about their health as well as their capacity for social interaction. Recent findings show that acute sleep deprivation and looking tired are related to decreased attractiveness and health, as perceived by others. This suggests that one might also avoid contact with sleep-deprived, or sleepy-looking, individuals, as a strategy to reduce health risk and poor interactions. In this study, 25 participants (14 females, age range 18–47 years) were photographed after 2 days of sleep restriction and after normal sleep, in a balanced design. The photographs were rated by 122 raters (65 females, age range 18–65 years) on how much they would like to socialize with the participants. They also rated participants' attractiveness, health, sleepiness and trustworthiness. The results show that raters were less inclined to socialize with individuals who had gotten insufficient sleep. Furthermore, when sleep-restricted, participants were perceived as less attractive, less healthy and more sleepy. There was no difference in perceived trustworthiness. These findings suggest that naturalistic sleep loss can be detected in a face and that people are less inclined to interact with a sleep-deprived individual.
topic sleep
sleep restriction
faces
attractiveness
social appeal
sleepiness
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160918
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AT kimmosorjonen negativeeffectsofrestrictedsleeponfacialappearanceandsocialappeal
AT johnaxelsson negativeeffectsofrestrictedsleeponfacialappearanceandsocialappeal
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