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      Hot or not? Thermal reactions to social contact

      1 , 1 , 1 , 1 , 1
      Biology Letters
      The Royal Society

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          Abstract

          Previous studies using thermal imaging have suggested that face and body temperature increase during periods of sexual arousal. Additionally, facial skin temperature changes are associated with other forms of emotional arousal, including fear and stress. This study investigated whether interpersonal social contact can elicit facial temperature changes. Study 1: infrared images were taken during a standardized interaction with a same- and opposite-sex experimenter using skin contact in a number of potentially high-intimate (face and chest) and low-intimate (arm and palm) locations. Facial skin temperatures significantly increased from baseline during the face and chest contact, and these temperature shifts were larger when contact was made by an opposite-sex experimenter. Study 2: the topography of facial temperature change was investigated in five regions: forehead, periorbital, nose, mouth and cheeks. Increased temperature in the periorbital, nose and mouth regions predicted overall facial temperature shifts to social contact. Our findings demonstrate skin temperature changes are a sensitive index of arousal during interpersonal interactions.

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          Most cited references15

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          Prototyping and transforming facial textures for perception research

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            Feeling and facial efference: implications of the vascular theory of emotion.

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              Skin Blood Perfusion and Oxygenation Colour Affect Perceived Human Health

              Skin blood perfusion and oxygenation depends upon cardiovascular, hormonal and circulatory health in humans and provides socio-sexual signals of underlying physiology, dominance and reproductive status in some primates. We allowed participants to manipulate colour calibrated facial photographs along empirically-measured oxygenated and deoxygenated blood colour axes both separately and simultaneously, to optimise healthy appearance. Participants increased skin blood colour, particularly oxygenated, above basal levels to optimise healthy appearance. We show, therefore, that skin blood perfusion and oxygenation influence perceived health in a way that may be important to mate choice.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biology Letters
                Biol. Lett.
                The Royal Society
                1744-9561
                1744-957X
                May 02 2012
                October 23 2012
                May 30 2012
                October 23 2012
                : 8
                : 5
                : 864-867
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Psychology, University of St Andrews, South Street, St Andrews, Fife KY16 9JP UK
                Article
                10.1098/rsbl.2012.0338
                3440979
                22647931
                8e18bd8c-5d60-4f65-81cb-3b24288bccaa
                © 2012
                History

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