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Cuteness

Cuteness is a subjective term describing a type of attractiveness commonly associated with youth and appearance, as well as a scientific concept and analytical model in ethology, first introduced by Konrad Lorenz.[2] Lorenz proposed the concept of baby schema (Kindchenschema), a set of facial and body features that make a creature appear "cute" and activate ("release") in others the motivation to care for it.[3] Cuteness may be ascribed to people as well as things that are regarded as attractive or charming.[4]

"Humans feel affection for animals with juvenile features: large eyes, bulging craniums, retreating chins (left column). Small-eyed, long-snouted animals (right column) do not elicit the same response." —Konrad Lorenz[1]

Juvenile traits

 
Change of head proportions (especially the relative size of the maxilla and mandible) as a function of age
 
 
Example of two cute Baroque angels from southern Germany, from the mid-18th century, made of lindenwood, gilded and with original polychromy, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City)

Doug Jones, a visiting scholar in anthropology at Cornell University, said that the proportions of facial features change with age due to changes in hard tissue and soft tissue, and Jones said that these "age-related changes" cause juvenile animals to have the "characteristic 'cute' appearance" of proportionately smaller snouts, higher foreheads and larger eyes than their adult counterparts. In terms of hard tissue, Jones said that the neurocranium grows a lot in juveniles while the bones for the nose and the parts of the skull involved in chewing food only reach maximum growth later. In terms of soft tissue, Jones said that the cartilaginous tissues of the ears and nose continue to grow throughout a person's lifetime, starting at age twenty-five the eyebrows descend on the "supraorbital rim" from a position above the supraorbital rim to a position below it, the "lateral aspect of the eyebrows" sags with age, making the eyes appear smaller, and the red part of the lips gets thinner with age due to loss of connective tissue.[5]

A study found that the faces of "attractive" Northern Italian Caucasian children have "characteristics of babyness" such as a "larger forehead", a smaller jaw, "a proportionately larger and more prominent maxilla", a wider face, a flatter face and larger "anteroposterior" facial dimensions than the Northern Italian Caucasian children used as a reference.[6]

Biological function

Konrad Lorenz argued in 1949 that infantile features triggered nurturing responses in adults and that this was an evolutionary adaptation which helped ensure that adults cared for their children, ultimately securing the survival of the species. Some later scientific studies have provided further evidence for Lorenz's theory. For example, it has been shown that human adults react positively to infants who are stereotypically cute. Studies have also shown that responses to cuteness—and to facial attractiveness in general—seem to be similar across and within cultures.[7] In a study conducted by Stephan Hamann of Emory University, he found using an fMRI, that cute pictures increased brain activity in the orbital frontal cortex.[8]

Growth pattern of children

Desmond Collins, who was an Extension Lecturer of Archaeology at London University,[9] said that the lengthened youth period of humans is part of neoteny.[10]

Physical anthropologist Barry Bogin said that the pattern of children's growth may intentionally increase the duration of their cuteness. Bogin said that the human brain reaches adult size when the body is only 40 percent complete, when "dental maturation is only 58 percent complete" and when "reproductive maturation is only 10 percent complete". Bogin said that this allometry of human growth allows children to have a "superficially infantile" appearance (large skull, small face, small body and sexual underdevelopment) longer than in other "mammalian species". Bogin said that this cute appearance causes a "nurturing" and "care-giving" response in "older individuals".[11]

 
 
Neoteny in humans is characterized by attributes of a large cranium, large eyes, small face, and small body

Gender differences

The perceived cuteness of an infant is influenced by the gender and behavior of the infant.[12][13] In the Koyama et al. (2006) research, female infants are seen as cute for the physical attraction that female infants display more than male infants;[12] whereas research by Karraker (1990) demonstrates that a caregiver's attention and involvement in the male infant's protection could be solely based on the perception of happiness and attractiveness of the child.[13]

The gender of an observer can determine their perception of the difference in cuteness. In a study by Sprengelmeyer et al. (2009) it was suggested that women were more sensitive to small differences in cuteness than the same aged men. This suggests that reproductive hormones in women are important for determining cuteness.[14]

This finding has also been demonstrated in a study conducted by T.R. Alley in which he had 25 undergraduate students (consisting of 7 men and 18 women) rate cuteness of infants depending on different characteristics such as age, behavioral traits, and physical characteristics such as head shape, and facial feature configuration.[15]

Preference in young children

Borgi et al. stated that young children demonstrate a preference for faces with a more "infantile facial" arrangement i.e. a rounder face, a higher forehead, bigger eyes, a smaller nose and a smaller mouth. In a study that used three- to six-year-old children, Borgi et al. (2014) asserted that the children showed a viewing time preference toward the eyes of "high infantile" faces of dogs, cats and humans as opposed to "low infantile" faces of those three species.[16]

Hormones and cuteness variation

There are suggestions that hormone levels can affect a person's perception of cuteness. Konrad Lorenz suggests that "caretaking behaviour and affective orientation" towards infants as an innate mechanism, and this is triggered by cute characteristics such as "chubby cheeks" and large eyes. The Sprengelmeyer et al. (2009) study expands on this claim by manipulating baby pictures to test groups on their ability to detect differences in cuteness. The studies show that premenopausal women detected cuteness better than same aged postmenopausal women. Furthermore, to support this claim, women taking birth control pills that raise levels of reproductive hormones detect cuteness better than same aged women not taking the pill.[14]

Sprengelmeyer gathered 24 young women, 24 young men, and 24 older women to participate in his study. He ran three studies in which images of white European babies were shown, and the participants were asked to rate them on a cuteness scale of one to seven. The study found differences among the groups in cuteness discrimination, which ruled out cohort and social influences on perceived cuteness. In the second study it was found that premenopausal women discriminated cuteness at a higher level than their postmenopausal female peers. This finding suggested a biological factor, which was then investigated further in the third study. Here, Sprengelmeyer compared cuteness sensitivity between premenopausal women who were, and were not taking oral contraceptives. The study concluded that post-perceptual processes were impacted by hormone levels (progesterone and estrogen specifically) in females, and thus impacted sensitivity to cuteness.[14]

Caregiving correlates

A study by Konrad Lorenz in the early 1940s found that the shape of an infant's head positively correlated with adult caregiving and an increased perception of "cute". However a study by Thomas Alley found no such correlation and pointed out faulty procedures in that study. Alley's study found that cephalic head shape of an infant did induce a positive response from adults, and these children were considered to be more "cute". In his study, Alley had 25 undergraduate students rate line drawings of an infant's face. The same drawing was used each time, however the cephalic head shape was changed using a cardioidal transformation (a transformation that models cephalic growth in relation to ageing process) to adjust the perceived age; other features of the face were not changed. The study concluded that a large head shape increased perceived cuteness, which then elicited a positive response in adult caretaking. The study also noted that perceived cuteness was also dependent on other physical and behavioural characteristics of the child, including age.[15]

In a study by McCabe (1984) of children whose ages ranged from toddlers to teenagers, the children with more "adult-like" facial proportions were more likely to have experienced physical abuse than children of the same age who had less "adult-like" facial proportions.[17]

A study by Karraker (1990) suggested that "an adult's beliefs about the personality and expected behavior of an infant can influence the adult's interaction with the infant", and gave evidence that in this way "basic cuteness effects may occasionally be obscured in particular infants".[13] Koyama (2006) said that an adult caregiver's perception of an infant's cuteness can motivate the amount of care and protection the caregiver provides, and the admiration demonstrated toward the infant, and concluded that "the adults' protective feeling for children appeared to be a more important criterion for the judgment of a boy's cuteness."[12]

Melanie Glocker (2009) provided experimental evidence that infants' cuteness motivates caretaking in adults, even if they are not related to the infant.[18] Glocker asked individuals to rate the level of cuteness of pictured infants and noted the motivation that these participants had to care for the infants. The research suggested that individuals' rating of the perceived cuteness of an infant corresponded to the level of motivation an individual had to care for this infant.[18] Glocker and colleagues then used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), to demonstrate that baby faces with higher content of baby schema features, generated more activation in the nucleus accumbens, a small brain area central to motivation and reward.[3] This work elucidated the neural mechanism through which baby schema (Kindchenschema) may motivate ("release") caretaking behavior. Furthermore, cute infants were more likely to be adopted and rated as more "likeable, friendly, healthy and competent" than infants who were less cute. There is an implication that baby schema response is crucial to human development because it lays the foundation for caregiving and the relationship between child and caretaker.[18]

Sherman, Haidt, & Coan (2009), in two experiments, found that exposure to high cuteness stimuli increased performance when playing the Operation game, a task that requires extreme carefulness. The study said that the shift in behavior toward greater carefulness is consistent with the viewpoint that cuteness is something that releases the human caregiving system. The study said that the shift in behavior toward greater carefulness also makes sense as an adaptation for caring for small children.[19]

Cultural significance

Doug Jones, a visiting scholar in anthropology at Cornell University, said that the faces of monkeys, dogs, birds and even the fronts of cars can be made to appear cuter by morphing them with a "cardioidal" (heart-shaped) mathematical transformation. Jones said that negative cardioidal strain results in faces appearing less mature and cuter by causing facial features at the top of the face to expand outward and upward while causing features at the bottom of the face to contract inward and upward.[5]

Stephen Jay Gould said that over time Mickey Mouse had been drawn to resemble a juvenile more with a relatively larger head, larger eyes, a larger and more bulging cranium, a less sloping and more rounded forehead, shorter, thicker and "pudgier" legs, thicker arms and a thicker snout which gave the appearance of being less protrusive. Gould suggested that this change in Mickey's image was intended to increase his popularity by making him appear cuter and "inoffensive". Gould said that the neotenous changes to Mickey's form were similar to the neotenous changes that occurred in human evolution.[1]

Nancy Etcoff, Ph.D. in psychology from Boston University, said "cartoonists capitalize on our innate preferences for juvenile features", and she mentioned Mickey Mouse and Bambi as examples of this trend. She said Mickey Mouse's bodily proportions "aged in reverse" since his inception, because "[h]is eyes and head kept getting bigger while his limbs kept getting shorter and thicker", culminating in him resembling a "human infant". She further mentioned the "exaggerated high forehead" and the "doe eyes" of Bambi as another example of this trend.[20]

Mark J. Estren, Ph.D. in psychology from the University at Buffalo,[21] said cute animals get more public attention and scientific study due to having physical characteristics that would be considered neotenous from the perspective of human development. Estren said that humans should be mindful of their bias for cute animals, so animals that would not be considered cute are also valued in addition to cute animals.[22]

The perception of cuteness is culturally diverse. The differences across cultures can be significantly associated to the need to be socially accepted.[23]

Cute animals

Sherman, Haidt, & Coan (2009) used images of puppies and kittens for the study's "high cuteness" stimuli in two experiments.[19]

William R. Miller, assistant professor of biology at Baker University in Kansas, said that most people, upon seeing tardigrades, say that they are the cutest invertebrates.[24]

Kenta Takada (2016) said that Miyanoshita (2008) said that the design of chocolates made to look like rhinoceros beetle larvae is a design that is both cute and disgusting.[25][26]

Evolutionary biologists suspect that "puppy dog eyes", a trait absent from wild wolves, were unintentionally selected for by humans during the domestication of dogs.[27] In order to obtain pets with particularly cute faces, some breeds of dogs have been bred with increasingly severe cranial deformities called brachycephaly, for example, the French bulldog who consequently suffer from Brachycephalic airway obstructive syndrome.[28][29]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Gould, S.J. (1980)., in The Panda's Thumb: More Reflections in Natural History. W.W. Norton & Company.
  2. ^ Lorenz, Konrad. Studies in Animal and Human Behavior. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Univ Press; 1971
  3. ^ a b Glocker ML, Langleben DD, Ruparel K, Loughead JW, Valdez JN, Griffin MD, Sachser N, Gur RC. "Baby schema modulates the brain reward system in nulliparous women." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences – U.S.A 2009 June 2;106(22):9115–9119.
  4. ^ . OED Online. March 2012. Oxford University Press. (accessed April 29, 2012).
  5. ^ a b Jones, D.; et al. (December 1995). "Sexual Selection, Physical Attractiveness, and Facial Neoteny: Cross-cultural Evidence and Implications [and Comments and Reply]". Current Anthropology. 36 (5): 723–748. doi:10.1086/204427. S2CID 52840802. Retrieved 22 January 2017.
  6. ^ Preedy, V.R. (2012). Handbook of anthropometry: Physical measures of human form in health and disease. New York: Springer Science. ISBN 978-1-4419-1787-4
  7. ^ Van Duuren, Mike; Kendell-Scott, Linda; Stark, Natalie. (PDF), King Alfred's College. Archived from the original.
  8. ^ Schneider, Avie (10 January 2013). "Agreed, Baby Pandas Are Cute. But Why?". National Public Radio. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  9. ^ (1970). Special Issue: Early Man. World Archaeology Volume 2, Issue 1, DOI: 10.1080/00438243.1970.9979467 page 112 link
  10. ^ Collins, D. et al. (1973). Background to archaeology: Britain in its European setting. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-20155-1 hard cover
  11. ^ Bogin, B. (1997). Evolutionary Hypotheses for Human Childhood. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology, vol. 40, pp. 63–89
  12. ^ a b c Koyama, Reiko; Takahashi, Yuwen; Mori, Kazuo (2006). "Assessing the cuteness of children: Significant factors and gender differences". Social Behavior and Personality. 34 (9): 1087–1100. doi:10.2224/sbp.2006.34.9.1087.
  13. ^ a b c Karraker, Katherine; Stern, Marilyn (1990). "Infant physical attractiveness and facial expression: Effects on adult perceptions". Basic and Applied Social Psychology. 11 (4): 371–385. doi:10.1207/s15324834basp1104_2.
  14. ^ a b c Sprengelmeyer, R; Perrett, D.; Fagan, E.; Cornwell, R.; Lobmaier, J.; Sprengelmeyer, A.; Aasheim, H.; Black, I.; Cameron, L.; Crow, S.; Milne, N.; Rhodes, E.; Young, A. (2009). "The Cutest Little Baby Face: A Hormonal Link to Sensitivity to Cuteness in Infant Faces". Psychological Science. 20 (9): 149–154. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.468.7485. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.2009.02272.x. PMID 19175530. S2CID 1040565.
  15. ^ a b Alley, Thomas (1981). "Head shape and the perception of cuteness". Developmental Psychology. 17 (5): 650–654. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.17.5.650.
  16. ^ Borgi, M. et al. (2014). Baby schema in human and animal faces induces cuteness perception and gaze allocation in children. In Frontiers in Psychology. 5(411).
  17. ^ Bruce, V. & Young, A. (2012). Face Perception. USA & Canada: Psychology Press. ISBN 978-1-84169-878-6 (hbk)
  18. ^ a b c Glocker, Melanie; Daniel D. Langleben; Kosha Ruparel; James W. Loughead; Ruben C. Gur; Norbert Sachser (2008). "Baby Schema in Infant Faces Induces Cuteness Perception and Motivation for Caretaking in Adults". Ethology. 115 (3): 257–263. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0310.2008.01603.x. PMC 3260535. PMID 22267884.
  19. ^ a b Sherman, G. D., Haidt, J., & Coan, J.A. (2009). Viewing Cute Images Increases Behavioral Carefulness. Emotion, 9(2). Pages 283 - 285. Link.
  20. ^ Etcoff, N. (1999). Survival of the Prettiest: The Science of Beauty. New York: Anchor Books. ISBN 978-0-307-77911-3
  21. ^ Estren, M.J. & Potter, B.A. (2013). Healing Hormones: How to Turn on Natural Chemicals to Reduce Stress. Oakland, CA: Ronin Publishing, Inc. ISBN 978-1-57951-180-7
  22. ^ Estren, M.J. (2012). "The Neoteny Barrier: Seeking Respect for the Non-Cute". Journal of Animal Ethics. 2 (1): 6–11. doi:10.5406/janimalethics.2.1.0006.
  23. ^ Kleck, Robert E.; Stephen A. Richardson; Ronald, Linda (1974). "Physical appearance cues and interpersonal attraction in children". Child Development. 45 (2): 305–310. doi:10.2307/1127949. JSTOR 1127949.
  24. ^ Miller, W.R. (2011). Tardigrades: These ambling, eight-legged microscopic "bears of the moss" are cute, ubiquitous, all but indestructible and a model organism for education. American Scientist, 99(5). Page 384. Link.
  25. ^ Takada, K. (2016). Gummi Candy as a Realistic Representation of a Rhinoceros Beetle Larva. American Entomologist, 62(3). Page 154. Link.
  26. ^ Breeding for extreme conformations
  27. ^ "Scientists Explain Puppy Dog Eyes". www.wbur.org.
  28. ^ Suffocate me…WITH LOVE – The History & Realities of French Bulldogs
  29. ^ What Unethical Breeding Has Done To Bulldogs

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of cuteness at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Cuteness at Wikimedia Commons

cuteness, cute, cutie, redirect, here, other, uses, cute, disambiguation, cutie, disambiguation, subjective, term, describing, type, attractiveness, commonly, associated, with, youth, appearance, well, scientific, concept, analytical, model, ethology, first, i. Cute and Cutie redirect here For other uses see Cute disambiguation and Cutie disambiguation Cuteness is a subjective term describing a type of attractiveness commonly associated with youth and appearance as well as a scientific concept and analytical model in ethology first introduced by Konrad Lorenz 2 Lorenz proposed the concept of baby schema Kindchenschema a set of facial and body features that make a creature appear cute and activate release in others the motivation to care for it 3 Cuteness may be ascribed to people as well as things that are regarded as attractive or charming 4 Humans feel affection for animals with juvenile features large eyes bulging craniums retreating chins left column Small eyed long snouted animals right column do not elicit the same response Konrad Lorenz 1 Contents 1 Juvenile traits 1 1 Biological function 2 Growth pattern of children 3 Gender differences 4 Preference in young children 5 Hormones and cuteness variation 6 Caregiving correlates 7 Cultural significance 8 Cute animals 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksJuvenile traits Change of head proportions especially the relative size of the maxilla and mandible as a function of age Example of two cute Baroque angels from southern Germany from the mid 18th century made of lindenwood gilded and with original polychromy in the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Doug Jones a visiting scholar in anthropology at Cornell University said that the proportions of facial features change with age due to changes in hard tissue and soft tissue and Jones said that these age related changes cause juvenile animals to have the characteristic cute appearance of proportionately smaller snouts higher foreheads and larger eyes than their adult counterparts In terms of hard tissue Jones said that the neurocranium grows a lot in juveniles while the bones for the nose and the parts of the skull involved in chewing food only reach maximum growth later In terms of soft tissue Jones said that the cartilaginous tissues of the ears and nose continue to grow throughout a person s lifetime starting at age twenty five the eyebrows descend on the supraorbital rim from a position above the supraorbital rim to a position below it the lateral aspect of the eyebrows sags with age making the eyes appear smaller and the red part of the lips gets thinner with age due to loss of connective tissue 5 A study found that the faces of attractive Northern Italian Caucasian children have characteristics of babyness such as a larger forehead a smaller jaw a proportionately larger and more prominent maxilla a wider face a flatter face and larger anteroposterior facial dimensions than the Northern Italian Caucasian children used as a reference 6 Biological function Konrad Lorenz argued in 1949 that infantile features triggered nurturing responses in adults and that this was an evolutionary adaptation which helped ensure that adults cared for their children ultimately securing the survival of the species Some later scientific studies have provided further evidence for Lorenz s theory For example it has been shown that human adults react positively to infants who are stereotypically cute Studies have also shown that responses to cuteness and to facial attractiveness in general seem to be similar across and within cultures 7 In a study conducted by Stephan Hamann of Emory University he found using an fMRI that cute pictures increased brain activity in the orbital frontal cortex 8 Growth pattern of childrenDesmond Collins who was an Extension Lecturer of Archaeology at London University 9 said that the lengthened youth period of humans is part of neoteny 10 Physical anthropologist Barry Bogin said that the pattern of children s growth may intentionally increase the duration of their cuteness Bogin said that the human brain reaches adult size when the body is only 40 percent complete when dental maturation is only 58 percent complete and when reproductive maturation is only 10 percent complete Bogin said that this allometry of human growth allows children to have a superficially infantile appearance large skull small face small body and sexual underdevelopment longer than in other mammalian species Bogin said that this cute appearance causes a nurturing and care giving response in older individuals 11 Neoteny in humans is characterized by attributes of a large cranium large eyes small face and small bodyGender differencesThe perceived cuteness of an infant is influenced by the gender and behavior of the infant 12 13 In the Koyama et al 2006 research female infants are seen as cute for the physical attraction that female infants display more than male infants 12 whereas research by Karraker 1990 demonstrates that a caregiver s attention and involvement in the male infant s protection could be solely based on the perception of happiness and attractiveness of the child 13 The gender of an observer can determine their perception of the difference in cuteness In a study by Sprengelmeyer et al 2009 it was suggested that women were more sensitive to small differences in cuteness than the same aged men This suggests that reproductive hormones in women are important for determining cuteness 14 This finding has also been demonstrated in a study conducted by T R Alley in which he had 25 undergraduate students consisting of 7 men and 18 women rate cuteness of infants depending on different characteristics such as age behavioral traits and physical characteristics such as head shape and facial feature configuration 15 Preference in young childrenBorgi et al stated that young children demonstrate a preference for faces with a more infantile facial arrangement i e a rounder face a higher forehead bigger eyes a smaller nose and a smaller mouth In a study that used three to six year old children Borgi et al 2014 asserted that the children showed a viewing time preference toward the eyes of high infantile faces of dogs cats and humans as opposed to low infantile faces of those three species 16 Hormones and cuteness variationThere are suggestions that hormone levels can affect a person s perception of cuteness Konrad Lorenz suggests that caretaking behaviour and affective orientation towards infants as an innate mechanism and this is triggered by cute characteristics such as chubby cheeks and large eyes The Sprengelmeyer et al 2009 study expands on this claim by manipulating baby pictures to test groups on their ability to detect differences in cuteness The studies show that premenopausal women detected cuteness better than same aged postmenopausal women Furthermore to support this claim women taking birth control pills that raise levels of reproductive hormones detect cuteness better than same aged women not taking the pill 14 Sprengelmeyer gathered 24 young women 24 young men and 24 older women to participate in his study He ran three studies in which images of white European babies were shown and the participants were asked to rate them on a cuteness scale of one to seven The study found differences among the groups in cuteness discrimination which ruled out cohort and social influences on perceived cuteness In the second study it was found that premenopausal women discriminated cuteness at a higher level than their postmenopausal female peers This finding suggested a biological factor which was then investigated further in the third study Here Sprengelmeyer compared cuteness sensitivity between premenopausal women who were and were not taking oral contraceptives The study concluded that post perceptual processes were impacted by hormone levels progesterone and estrogen specifically in females and thus impacted sensitivity to cuteness 14 Caregiving correlatesA study by Konrad Lorenz in the early 1940s found that the shape of an infant s head positively correlated with adult caregiving and an increased perception of cute However a study by Thomas Alley found no such correlation and pointed out faulty procedures in that study Alley s study found that cephalic head shape of an infant did induce a positive response from adults and these children were considered to be more cute In his study Alley had 25 undergraduate students rate line drawings of an infant s face The same drawing was used each time however the cephalic head shape was changed using a cardioidal transformation a transformation that models cephalic growth in relation to ageing process to adjust the perceived age other features of the face were not changed The study concluded that a large head shape increased perceived cuteness which then elicited a positive response in adult caretaking The study also noted that perceived cuteness was also dependent on other physical and behavioural characteristics of the child including age 15 In a study by McCabe 1984 of children whose ages ranged from toddlers to teenagers the children with more adult like facial proportions were more likely to have experienced physical abuse than children of the same age who had less adult like facial proportions 17 A study by Karraker 1990 suggested that an adult s beliefs about the personality and expected behavior of an infant can influence the adult s interaction with the infant and gave evidence that in this way basic cuteness effects may occasionally be obscured in particular infants 13 Koyama 2006 said that an adult caregiver s perception of an infant s cuteness can motivate the amount of care and protection the caregiver provides and the admiration demonstrated toward the infant and concluded that the adults protective feeling for children appeared to be a more important criterion for the judgment of a boy s cuteness 12 Melanie Glocker 2009 provided experimental evidence that infants cuteness motivates caretaking in adults even if they are not related to the infant 18 Glocker asked individuals to rate the level of cuteness of pictured infants and noted the motivation that these participants had to care for the infants The research suggested that individuals rating of the perceived cuteness of an infant corresponded to the level of motivation an individual had to care for this infant 18 Glocker and colleagues then used functional magnetic resonance imaging fMRI to demonstrate that baby faces with higher content of baby schema features generated more activation in the nucleus accumbens a small brain area central to motivation and reward 3 This work elucidated the neural mechanism through which baby schema Kindchenschema may motivate release caretaking behavior Furthermore cute infants were more likely to be adopted and rated as more likeable friendly healthy and competent than infants who were less cute There is an implication that baby schema response is crucial to human development because it lays the foundation for caregiving and the relationship between child and caretaker 18 Sherman Haidt amp Coan 2009 in two experiments found that exposure to high cuteness stimuli increased performance when playing the Operation game a task that requires extreme carefulness The study said that the shift in behavior toward greater carefulness is consistent with the viewpoint that cuteness is something that releases the human caregiving system The study said that the shift in behavior toward greater carefulness also makes sense as an adaptation for caring for small children 19 Cultural significanceDoug Jones a visiting scholar in anthropology at Cornell University said that the faces of monkeys dogs birds and even the fronts of cars can be made to appear cuter by morphing them with a cardioidal heart shaped mathematical transformation Jones said that negative cardioidal strain results in faces appearing less mature and cuter by causing facial features at the top of the face to expand outward and upward while causing features at the bottom of the face to contract inward and upward 5 Stephen Jay Gould said that over time Mickey Mouse had been drawn to resemble a juvenile more with a relatively larger head larger eyes a larger and more bulging cranium a less sloping and more rounded forehead shorter thicker and pudgier legs thicker arms and a thicker snout which gave the appearance of being less protrusive Gould suggested that this change in Mickey s image was intended to increase his popularity by making him appear cuter and inoffensive Gould said that the neotenous changes to Mickey s form were similar to the neotenous changes that occurred in human evolution 1 Nancy Etcoff Ph D in psychology from Boston University said cartoonists capitalize on our innate preferences for juvenile features and she mentioned Mickey Mouse and Bambi as examples of this trend She said Mickey Mouse s bodily proportions aged in reverse since his inception because h is eyes and head kept getting bigger while his limbs kept getting shorter and thicker culminating in him resembling a human infant She further mentioned the exaggerated high forehead and the doe eyes of Bambi as another example of this trend 20 Mark J Estren Ph D in psychology from the University at Buffalo 21 said cute animals get more public attention and scientific study due to having physical characteristics that would be considered neotenous from the perspective of human development Estren said that humans should be mindful of their bias for cute animals so animals that would not be considered cute are also valued in addition to cute animals 22 The perception of cuteness is culturally diverse The differences across cultures can be significantly associated to the need to be socially accepted 23 Cute animals Golden Retriever puppy This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2022 Sherman Haidt amp Coan 2009 used images of puppies and kittens for the study s high cuteness stimuli in two experiments 19 William R Miller assistant professor of biology at Baker University in Kansas said that most people upon seeing tardigrades say that they are the cutest invertebrates 24 Kenta Takada 2016 said that Miyanoshita 2008 said that the design of chocolates made to look like rhinoceros beetle larvae is a design that is both cute and disgusting 25 26 Evolutionary biologists suspect that puppy dog eyes a trait absent from wild wolves were unintentionally selected for by humans during the domestication of dogs 27 In order to obtain pets with particularly cute faces some breeds of dogs have been bred with increasingly severe cranial deformities called brachycephaly for example the French bulldog who consequently suffer from Brachycephalic airway obstructive syndrome 28 29 See alsoBeauty Cute cat theory of digital activism Kawaii and Moe Japanese concepts related to cuteness Kewpie doll effect NeotenyReferences a b Gould S J 1980 A Biological Homage to Mickey Mouse in The Panda s Thumb More Reflections in Natural History W W Norton amp Company Lorenz Konrad Studies in Animal and Human Behavior Cambridge MA Harvard Univ Press 1971 a b Glocker ML Langleben DD Ruparel K Loughead JW Valdez JN Griffin MD Sachser N Gur RC Baby schema modulates the brain reward system in nulliparous women Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences U S A 2009 June 2 106 22 9115 9119 cute adj OED Online March 2012 Oxford University Press accessed April 29 2012 a b Jones D et al December 1995 Sexual Selection Physical Attractiveness and Facial Neoteny Cross cultural Evidence and Implications and Comments and Reply Current Anthropology 36 5 723 748 doi 10 1086 204427 S2CID 52840802 Retrieved 22 January 2017 Preedy V R 2012 Handbook of anthropometry Physical measures of human form in health and disease New York Springer Science ISBN 978 1 4419 1787 4 Van Duuren Mike Kendell Scott Linda Stark Natalie Early Aesthetic Choices Infant Preferences for Attractive Premature Infant Faces PDF King Alfred s College Archived from the original Schneider Avie 10 January 2013 Agreed Baby Pandas Are Cute But Why National Public Radio Retrieved 13 January 2013 1970 Special Issue Early Man World Archaeology Volume 2 Issue 1 DOI 10 1080 00438243 1970 9979467 page 112 link Collins D et al 1973 Background to archaeology Britain in its European setting Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 20155 1 hard cover Bogin B 1997 Evolutionary Hypotheses for Human Childhood Yearbook of Physical Anthropology vol 40 pp 63 89 a b c Koyama Reiko Takahashi Yuwen Mori Kazuo 2006 Assessing the cuteness of children Significant factors and gender differences Social Behavior and Personality 34 9 1087 1100 doi 10 2224 sbp 2006 34 9 1087 a b c Karraker Katherine Stern Marilyn 1990 Infant physical attractiveness and facial expression Effects on adult perceptions Basic and Applied Social Psychology 11 4 371 385 doi 10 1207 s15324834basp1104 2 a b c Sprengelmeyer R Perrett D Fagan E Cornwell R Lobmaier J Sprengelmeyer A Aasheim H Black I Cameron L Crow S Milne N Rhodes E Young A 2009 The Cutest Little Baby Face A Hormonal Link to Sensitivity to Cuteness in Infant Faces Psychological Science 20 9 149 154 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 468 7485 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9280 2009 02272 x PMID 19175530 S2CID 1040565 a b Alley Thomas 1981 Head shape and the perception of cuteness Developmental Psychology 17 5 650 654 doi 10 1037 0012 1649 17 5 650 Borgi M et al 2014 Baby schema in human and animal faces induces cuteness perception and gaze allocation in children In Frontiers in Psychology 5 411 Bruce V amp Young A 2012 Face Perception USA amp Canada Psychology Press ISBN 978 1 84169 878 6 hbk a b c Glocker Melanie Daniel D Langleben Kosha Ruparel James W Loughead Ruben C Gur Norbert Sachser 2008 Baby Schema in Infant Faces Induces Cuteness Perception and Motivation for Caretaking in Adults Ethology 115 3 257 263 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 2008 01603 x PMC 3260535 PMID 22267884 a b Sherman G D Haidt J amp Coan J A 2009 Viewing Cute Images Increases Behavioral Carefulness Emotion 9 2 Pages 283 285 Link Etcoff N 1999 Survival of the Prettiest The Science of Beauty New York Anchor Books ISBN 978 0 307 77911 3 Estren M J amp Potter B A 2013 Healing Hormones How to Turn on Natural Chemicals to Reduce Stress Oakland CA Ronin Publishing Inc ISBN 978 1 57951 180 7 Estren M J 2012 The Neoteny Barrier Seeking Respect for the Non Cute Journal of Animal Ethics 2 1 6 11 doi 10 5406 janimalethics 2 1 0006 Kleck Robert E Stephen A Richardson Ronald Linda 1974 Physical appearance cues and interpersonal attraction in children Child Development 45 2 305 310 doi 10 2307 1127949 JSTOR 1127949 Miller W R 2011 Tardigrades These ambling eight legged microscopic bears of the moss are cute ubiquitous all but indestructible and a model organism for education American Scientist 99 5 Page 384 Link Takada K 2016 Gummi Candy as a Realistic Representation of a Rhinoceros Beetle Larva American Entomologist 62 3 Page 154 Link Breeding for extreme conformations Scientists Explain Puppy Dog Eyes www wbur org Suffocate me WITH LOVE The History amp Realities of French Bulldogs What Unethical Breeding Has Done To BulldogsExternal 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