Miswan, Akmal Hisham
(2019)
Photogrammetric analysis of facial attractiveness in Malay Malaysian women.
Masters thesis, Pusat Pengajian Sains Perubatan.
Abstract
Background Asians are a heterogeneous group with different average and attractive facial
features between individual ethnicities. This study aimed to establish normative
anthropometric measurements of the Malay Malaysian Women's (MMW) face, compare
results with the standard for North American White Women (NAWW), the neoclassical
canons of facial proportions and other Asian ethnicities; and quantitatively defined
aesthetic facial features in the MMW.
Methods This is a cross-sectional photogrammetric study. In part 1 of this study, we
obtained standardized frontal and lateral facial photographs of 103 MMW volunteers
between the ages of 18 to 35. For each face, we measured 24 standard anthropometric
parameters. We compared our results with the published NAWW norms and the facial
canons proportions. In part 2 of the study, ten raters evaluated the photographs for
aesthetics using a 10-point Likert’s scale. Attractive MMW (top 15%) were compared
with the average MMW (remaining 85%), NAWW, and other ethnicities.
Results The neoclassical facial canons were not found to apply to most of the MMW. We
found significant differences between MMW and NAWW in 20 of 24 measurements
(p<0.05). Attractive face in the MMW had a smaller total face height, smaller lower face
height, and narrower mandible width compared to the average MMW. Comparing the
normative and attractive MMW with other ethnicities indicated various interracial
differences.
Conclusion Grouping this patient into a single Asian category or using analysis standards
used for whites are impractical. This study detailed comprehensive facial anthropometric
data and aesthetic criteria for this population. The values presented here could be used as
a standard for facial analysis in women of Malay descent.
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