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Contributions of dental colour to the physical attractiveness stereotype
Author(s) -
Montero J.,
GómezPolo C.,
Santos J. A.,
Portillo M.,
Lorenzo M. C.,
Albaladejo A.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of oral rehabilitation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.991
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1365-2842
pISSN - 0305-182X
DOI - 10.1111/joor.12194
Subject(s) - psychology , attractiveness , physical attractiveness , social psychology , lightness , popularity , happiness , perception , hue , odds , likert scale , social perception , developmental psychology , logistic regression , mathematics , statistics , neuroscience , artificial intelligence , computer science , psychoanalysis , optics , physics
Summary Dental appearance may play a key role on the way we develop a first impression of another person. To test whether relatively minor changes in the lightness of tooth colour would influence the perceived social appeal (social, intellectual, psychological and relational abilities) of an unknown male and unknown female, this cross‐sectional study was performed on 555 Spanish adults. The two major independent variables related to the photograph were tooth lightness (computer‐derived), divided into three levels that included lightened teeth, natural teeth and darkened teeth, and the gender of the observed face. Moreover, six independent variables related to the observer were assessed (age, gender, educational level, place of residence, frequency of brushing and self‐reported health status). The dependent variables were scored on five‐point Likert scales designed to quantify four domains (social, intellectual, psychological and relationship competences) of the Social Appeal Scale ( SAS ). Tooth lightness influences the perception of social appeal in all dimensions, as darkened smiles received significantly poorer scores than natural‐colour smiles, but these were also worse than lightened smiles. A logistic regression analysis revealed that the major predictor of social appeal was tooth lightness, and for each increment in lightness (from darkened to lightened smiles), the odds ratio ( OR ) of positive values being perceived increased significantly in all items (from 2·3 in Popularity to 6·9 in Happiness ). A perceptible change in dental lightness is the strongest factor associated with the dental attractiveness stereotype, affecting significantly the 12 traits assessed, but mainly the Happiness , Social Relations and Academic Performance .