sab78.
Iron
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Eye color is kinda irrelevant unless it's very striking, and people just correlate eye colors to certain features
And they're are far more important things to worry about than eye color
> In this study, we did not observe any association between eye
> color and attractiveness, neither in men nor women.
> Most surprisingly, no correlation was found between iridal color and rated attractiveness.
As I said before, Eye color can affect the attractiveness of the eye area but only if it is truly striking in color
Things like scleral whiteness, pupil diameter, iris to pupil ratio, limbal rings, canthal tilt, eye depth, eye-shape, eyebrows, and eyelashes, etc matter a lot more.
** **
And there is also research on dominance and trustworthiness and this is the conclusion:
> To find out, the scientists used computer manipulation to take the same faces but change their eye colors. Without changing traits other than hue of the iris, the researchers swapped the eye colors of the test faces from blue to brown and vice versa. **This time, the opposite effect was found.** Despite the strange correlation to eye color, the team found that **eye color didn't affect a photo's trustworthiness rating. So it isn't the eye color itself that really matters**—something else about brown-eyed faces makes them seem more dependable.
** **
> In order to find out whether it is eye color that specifically influences perceived dominance in males, and not other eye color-associated facial features, we changed the iris color of brown-eyed subjects to blue and vice versa.
> With this manipulation, males with eye color changed
> to blue (originally brown-eyed) were rated as more dominant than
> males with brown colored irises (originally blue-eyed).
> Mean differences of perceived dominance of subjects before and
> after eye color manipulation were not different from zero which suggests that the color of iris itself had
> no effect on perceived dominance.
Source:https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00266-011-9793-x
And they're are far more important things to worry about than eye color
> In this study, we did not observe any association between eye
> color and attractiveness, neither in men nor women.
> Most surprisingly, no correlation was found between iridal color and rated attractiveness.
As I said before, Eye color can affect the attractiveness of the eye area but only if it is truly striking in color
Things like scleral whiteness, pupil diameter, iris to pupil ratio, limbal rings, canthal tilt, eye depth, eye-shape, eyebrows, and eyelashes, etc matter a lot more.
** **
And there is also research on dominance and trustworthiness and this is the conclusion:
> To find out, the scientists used computer manipulation to take the same faces but change their eye colors. Without changing traits other than hue of the iris, the researchers swapped the eye colors of the test faces from blue to brown and vice versa. **This time, the opposite effect was found.** Despite the strange correlation to eye color, the team found that **eye color didn't affect a photo's trustworthiness rating. So it isn't the eye color itself that really matters**—something else about brown-eyed faces makes them seem more dependable.
** **
> In order to find out whether it is eye color that specifically influences perceived dominance in males, and not other eye color-associated facial features, we changed the iris color of brown-eyed subjects to blue and vice versa.
> With this manipulation, males with eye color changed
> to blue (originally brown-eyed) were rated as more dominant than
> males with brown colored irises (originally blue-eyed).
> Mean differences of perceived dominance of subjects before and
> after eye color manipulation were not different from zero which suggests that the color of iris itself had
> no effect on perceived dominance.
Source:https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00266-011-9793-x