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  2. File:Anterior view of human male, retouched, cropped.jpg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Anterior_view_of...

    Gallery of human female and male images. Human Body.jpg, a retouched image of both female and male, with anterior and posterior views. Anterior view, without labels.

  3. File:Anterior view of human male, retouched.jpg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Anterior_view_of...

    Gallery of human female and male images. Human Body.jpg, a retouched image of both female and male, with anterior and posterior views. Anterior view, without labels.

  4. Facial symmetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facial_symmetry

    Facial bilateral symmetry is typically defined as fluctuating asymmetry of the face comparing random differences in facial features of the two sides of the face. [4] The human face also has systematic, directional asymmetry: on average, the face (mouth, nose and eyes) sits systematically to the left with respect to the axis through the ears ...

  5. File:Anterior view of human female and male, with labels.jpg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Anterior_view_of...

    Gallery of human female and male images. Human Body.jpg, a retouched image of both female and male, with anterior and posterior views. Anterior view, without labels.

  6. Averageness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Averageness

    When the differences between the first face and the second face were slightly exaggerated the new "exaggerated" (or "caricaturized") face was judged, on average, to be more attractive still. Although the three faces look very similar, the so-called "exaggerated face" looks younger: a slimmer (less wide) face, and larger eyes, than the average face.

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  8. Neoteny in humans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoteny_in_humans

    Doug Jones, a visiting scholar in anthropology at Cornell University, said that human evolution's trend toward neoteny may have been caused by sexual selection in human evolution for neotenous facial traits in women by men with the resulting neoteny in male faces being a "by-product" of sexual selection for neotenous female

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