Can a facelift make you more likeable?

TO GO WITH STORY TITLED SOUTH AFRICA SURGERY SAFARI--Vanessa Skip, recovers from plastic surgery at a private clinic in Johannesbrug, South Africa, Thursday April 4, 2002. Skipp, from Houston, Texas, underwent the surgery and combined it with a Safari ata luxury game park. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell)

TO GO WITH STORY TITLED SOUTH AFRICA SURGERY SAFARI--Vanessa Skip, recovers from plastic surgery at a private clinic in Johannesbrug, South Africa, Thursday April 4, 2002. Skipp, from Houston, Texas, underwent the surgery and combined it with a Safari ata luxury game park. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell)

Published Apr 15, 2015

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Washington - Plastic surgery is supposed to make your face look different.

But the impacts of procedures can go far beyond a change in physical appearance: people could perceive your post-surgery personality differently, too, new research suggests.

People rated women who received certain kinds of facial rejuvenation procedures as being more likeable, attractive and feminine, according to a study published in the journal JAMA Facial Plastic Surgery. The women who underwent the procedures were also perceived to have more social skills.

 

“Our faces are conveying these traits, even when we’re not intending to,” said study co-author Michael J Reilly, an assistant professor of facial reconstructive surgery at the Georgetown University School of Medicine.

”All of our faces do this all of the time, but some of our faces are more prone to expressing an emotion.”

The reactions people have to those traits are, via looking at physical appearance, is rooted in our brain functioning and evolution, Reilly said.

For the study, 173 respondents – 110 women and 63 men – viewed photos of 30 women who had procedures such as facelifts, upper and lower eye lifts and neck lifts. The before-and-after photos were mixed in different groupings so there wouldn’t be a comparison bias.

The women were rated on eight traits. Overall, researchers found, the women’s post-operation photos were given higher rankings for social skills, likeability, attractiveness and femininity.

The after-surgery photos also trended higher in trustworthiness rankings, but the connection wasn’t statistically significant.

And though the post-operation photos as a whole were rated more positively than the pre-operation images, four of the women photographed for the study were actually rated worse following their procedures.

Surgery, Reilly cautions, can leave patients being perceived differently – and that’s not always a good thing.

“Each individual is taking on the potential risk of negative results,” he said of plastic surgery patients.

“You might come out looking less likeable, or less socially skilled, which can obviously have lots of impacts in someone’s daily life.”

Reilly, who mostly performs reconstructive surgery, does some cosmetic surgery as well and wanted to look more critically at such procedures to understand the potential impacts they could have.

“I really wanted to make sure that when I was offering cosmetic surgery to patients, I was actually doing something good for them,” he said.

Washington Post-Bloomberg

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