LAT looksmax.org admission test. mandatory for evaluating the new candidates for prestigious school of aesthetics admission.

SharpOrange

SharpOrange

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Looksmax school of aesthetics as a dean of school of aesthetics this is my demo test to evaluate my upcoming students.
it is a mock test so students can practice.:forcedsmile::forcedsmile::forcedsmile::forcedsmile:



SECTION A. CONSTRAINED STRUCTURAL TRIAGE (8 QUESTIONS)​

Q1.
Male candidate. Flat midface, neutral occlusion, mild mandibular retrusion, negative canthal tilt, long lower third. One skeletal intervention allowed. Which produces the highest net gain without worsening thirds?

A. Sliding genioplasty
B. Mandibular advancement
C. Zygomatic osteotomy
D. Le Fort I advancement
E. Infraorbital rim augmentation


Q2.
Which intervention most often improves side profile while degrading frontal harmony over time?

A. Mandibular advancement
B. Chin wing osteotomy
C. Mandibular angle implants
D. Zygomatic osteotomy
E. Le Fort I advancement


Q3.
Patient has strong mandible, weak maxilla, good chin projection. Which single procedure most risks exaggerating imbalance?

A. Sliding genioplasty
B. Mandibular advancement
C. Mandibular angle implants
D. Zygomatic osteotomy
E. Infraorbital rim advancement


Q4.
Which surgery’s aesthetic success depends most on correct diagnosis rather than technical execution?

A. Rhinoplasty
B. Buccal fat excision
C. Maxillomandibular advancement
D. Sliding genioplasty
E. Brow lift


Q5.
Which structural change most reliably increases perceived eye area without touching eyelids?

A. Upper blepharoplasty
B. Brow lift
C. Infraorbital rim advancement
D. Lateral canthopexy
E. Fat grafting to tear trough


Q6.
Which sequence violates Looksmax hierarchy despite short term visual improvement?

A. MMA followed by rhinoplasty
B. Zygomatic advancement followed by fillers
C. Chin wing before mandibular advancement
D. Bone work before soft tissue
E. Maxillary advancement before genioplasty


Q7.
Which intervention most often creates the illusion of forward growth in photos but not in real world motion?

A. Mandibular advancement
B. Zygomatic osteotomy
C. Jawline filler
D. Chin wing osteotomy
E. Le Fort I advancement


Q8.
Which single change is most likely to worsen a vertically long face even if the jawline looks sharper?

A. Counterclockwise rotation
B. Chin wing osteotomy
C. Mandibular angle implants
D. Maxillary advancement
E. Infraorbital rim augmentation


SECTION B. FAILURE MODE DETECTION (8 QUESTIONS)​

Q9.
Which statement signals an unqualified evaluator?

A. Mandible follows maxilla
B. Bone sets the ceiling
C. Eye aesthetics are primarily soft tissue
D. Forward growth affects all thirds
E. Occlusion constrains aesthetics


Q10.
Which intervention has the highest probability of aging related aesthetic reversal?

A. Le Fort I advancement
B. Mandibular advancement
C. Zygomatic osteotomy
D. Buccal fat excision
E. Sliding genioplasty


Q11.
Which improvement cannot be made permanent without skeletal change?

A. Nasal width
B. Jawline definition
C. Negative canthal tilt
D. Skin texture
E. Lip fullness


Q12.
Which reasoning pattern is most dangerous in surgical planning?

A. Prioritizing airway
B. Considering occlusion
C. Maximizing angles without thirds analysis
D. Rejecting fillers
E. Accounting for soft tissue thickness


Q13.
Which feature is most often misdiagnosed as mandibular weakness?

A. Retruded chin
B. Vertical growth pattern
C. Zygomatic hypoplasia
D. Narrow palate
E. High gonial angle


Q14.
Which procedure most commonly produces regret when done early?

A. Sliding genioplasty
B. Buccal fat excision
C. Maxillary advancement
D. Zygomatic osteotomy
E. Mandibular advancement


Q15.
Which change most often masks skeletal deficiency rather than correcting it?

A. Rhinoplasty
B. Jawline filler
C. MMA
D. Zygomatic osteotomy
E. Infraorbital rim advancement


Q16.
Which metric is least reliable when evaluated from selfies alone?

A. Facial width to height
B. Gonial angle
C. Chin projection
D. Eye spacing
E. Nose length


SECTION C. RATIOS UNDER CONTEXT (5 QUESTIONS)​

Q17.
Which ratio becomes misleading without growth pattern analysis?

A. Facial width to height
B. Bizygomatic to bigonial
C. Gonial angle
D. Lower third proportion
E. Interpupillary distance


Q18.
Why can equal facial thirds still appear weak in males?

A. Excess soft tissue
B. Lack of lower third dominance
C. High nasal bridge
D. Eye color
E. Thin lips


Q19.
Which ratio shows the strongest sexual dimorphism across populations?

A. Nose width
B. Bizygomatic width
C. Gonial angle
D. Facial symmetry
E. Eye spacing


Q20.
Which proportion should never be optimized in isolation?

A. Chin projection
B. Ramus height
C. Mandibular plane angle
D. Eye spacing
E. Nasal length


Q21.
Which ratio most directly affects perceived facial strength in males?

A. Nose length to face height
B. Facial width to facial height
C. Eye spacing to face width
D. Chin height to lip height
E. Forehead height to midface height


SECTION D. PHENOTYPE AND POPULATION REASONING (5 QUESTIONS)​

Q22.
Which error is most common when evaluating non European phenotypes?

A. Ignoring symmetry
B. Overemphasizing harmony
C. Applying Caucasian cephalometric norms
D. Considering soft tissue thickness
E. Accounting for growth pattern


Q23.
Which trait best compensates for reduced nasal projection at the skeletal level?

A. Strong chin
B. Wide malar bones
C. Tall cranial vault
D. Thick lips
E. Long midface


Q24.
Which trait is least transferable across ethnic groups while maintaining attractiveness?

A. Symmetry
B. Forward growth
C. Eye color
D. Facial harmony
E. Proportional thirds


Q25.
Which population level statistic matters least in individual evaluation?

A. Average jaw projection
B. Average nasal width
C. Individual bone structure
D. Growth pattern
E. Occlusal class


Q26.
Which statement reflects qualified Looksmax evaluation?

A. One ideal face exists
B. Ratios override structure
C. Harmony is context dependent
D. Surgery equalizes all phenotypes
E. Masculinity is angle maximization


SCORING AND ELIMINATION LOGIC​

• Sections A and B are elimination rounds
• Any error in Q1 to Q8 or Q9 to Q12 is automatic fail
• Overall pass threshold 90 percent
• Section C allows one mistake
• Section D allows one mistake
• Any preference pattern favoring fillers or cosmetic masking triggers manual fail
@LTNUser @unkownincel

SECTION A. CONSTRAINED STRUCTURAL TRIAGE​


Q1. Correct answer: C. Zygomatic osteotomy
Logic: Flat midface and negative canthal tilt indicate eye support deficiency. Zygomatic advancement improves midface projection and orbital support without worsening an already long lower third. Mandibular or chin work would exacerbate vertical imbalance. Le Fort I risks elongation.


Q2. Correct answer: C. Mandibular angle implants
Logic: Angle implants sharpen profile views but widen the lower face frontally and age poorly. They do not correct growth vectors and often degrade harmony over time.


Q3. Correct answer: B. Mandibular advancement
Logic: Strong mandible with weak maxilla means advancing the mandible alone increases imbalance. Mandible follows maxilla. Violating this exaggerates disharmony.


Q4. Correct answer: B. Buccal fat excision
Logic: Outcome depends almost entirely on correct patient selection. Technical execution is trivial. Wrong diagnosis causes irreversible hollowing and premature aging.


Q5. Correct answer: C. Infraorbital rim advancement
Logic: Eye area perception is driven by bony support. Infraorbital advancement increases scleral support and eye openness without touching lids.


Q6. Correct answer: C. Chin wing before mandibular advancement
Logic: Chin wing is contouring. Mandibular advancement is foundational. Doing contour before structure violates hierarchy even if short term visuals improve.


Q7. Correct answer: C. Jawline filler
Logic: Fillers create photographic edge definition without changing skeletal projection. Motion and real world angles expose the illusion.


Q8. Correct answer: C. Mandibular angle implants
Logic: They increase vertical and lateral mass at the lower third, worsening long face appearance even if the jawline appears sharper.




SECTION B. FAILURE MODE DETECTION​


Q9. Correct answer: C. Eye aesthetics are primarily soft tissue
Logic: Eye aesthetics are structurally driven by orbital rims and zygoma. Soft tissue is secondary.


Q10. Correct answer: D. Buccal fat excision
Logic: Fat loss accelerates with age. Bone based changes are stable. Buccal removal has the highest reversal and regret rate.


Q11. Correct answer: C. Negative canthal tilt
Logic: Permanent correction requires changing lateral orbital rim position. Soft tissue methods relapse.


Q12. Correct answer: C. Maximizing angles without thirds analysis
Logic: Angle chasing ignores vertical balance and growth pattern. This is a classic unqualified error.


Q13. Correct answer: B. Vertical growth pattern
Logic: Long faces with downward growth mimic mandibular weakness even when sagittal projection is adequate.


Q14. Correct answer: B. Buccal fat excision
Logic: Early removal removes youthful fullness that cannot be restored naturally. Regret increases with age.


Q15. Correct answer: B. Jawline filler
Logic: It masks deficiency instead of correcting structure. Removal reveals unchanged bone.


Q16. Correct answer: B. Gonial angle
Logic: Selfies distort perspective and jaw angles heavily. Gonial angle requires standardized imaging.




SECTION C. RATIOS UNDER CONTEXT​


Q17. Correct answer: D. Lower third proportion
Logic: A long lower third can come from vertical growth, not projection. Ratio alone misleads without growth analysis.


Q18. Correct answer: B. Lack of lower third dominance
Logic: Equal thirds are neutral. Male faces require slightly dominant lower third for strength.


Q19. Correct answer: C. Gonial angle
Logic: Strong sexual dimorphism. Males have more acute angles across populations.


Q20. Correct answer: C. Mandibular plane angle
Logic: It interacts with maxilla, ramus height, and facial thirds. Isolated optimization breaks harmony.


Q21. Correct answer: B. Facial width to facial height
Logic: This ratio governs perceived robustness and strength more than localized measures.




SECTION D. PHENOTYPE AND POPULATION REASONING​


Q22. Correct answer: C. Applying Caucasian cephalometric norms
Logic: Different populations have different soft tissue thickness and skeletal baselines. Universal templates fail.


Q23. Correct answer: B. Wide malar bones
Logic: Malar width restores midface balance and eye support when nasal projection is reduced.


Q24. Correct answer: C. Eye color
Logic: Eye color attractiveness is population dependent. Symmetry and growth are universal.


Q25. Correct answer: B. Average nasal width
Logic: Population averages do not override individual bone structure and growth pattern.


Q26. Correct answer: C. Harmony is context dependent
Logic: Qualified evaluation adapts ratios and priorities to sex, phenotype, and structure.
 
Last edited:
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Reactions: HTNcutecel
 
Looksmax school of aesthetics as a dean of school of aesthetics this is my demo test to evaluate my upcoming students.
it is a mock test so students can practice.:forcedsmile::forcedsmile::forcedsmile::forcedsmile:



SECTION A. CONSTRAINED STRUCTURAL TRIAGE (8 QUESTIONS)​

Q1.
Male candidate. Flat midface, neutral occlusion, mild mandibular retrusion, negative canthal tilt, long lower third. One skeletal intervention allowed. Which produces the highest net gain without worsening thirds?

A. Sliding genioplasty
B. Mandibular advancement
C. Zygomatic osteotomy
D. Le Fort I advancement
E. Infraorbital rim augmentation


Q2.
Which intervention most often improves side profile while degrading frontal harmony over time?

A. Mandibular advancement
B. Chin wing osteotomy
C. Mandibular angle implants
D. Zygomatic osteotomy
E. Le Fort I advancement


Q3.
Patient has strong mandible, weak maxilla, good chin projection. Which single procedure most risks exaggerating imbalance?

A. Sliding genioplasty
B. Mandibular advancement
C. Mandibular angle implants
D. Zygomatic osteotomy
E. Infraorbital rim advancement


Q4.
Which surgery’s aesthetic success depends most on correct diagnosis rather than technical execution?

A. Rhinoplasty
B. Buccal fat excision
C. Maxillomandibular advancement
D. Sliding genioplasty
E. Brow lift


Q5.
Which structural change most reliably increases perceived eye area without touching eyelids?

A. Upper blepharoplasty
B. Brow lift
C. Infraorbital rim advancement
D. Lateral canthopexy
E. Fat grafting to tear trough


Q6.
Which sequence violates Looksmax hierarchy despite short term visual improvement?

A. MMA followed by rhinoplasty
B. Zygomatic advancement followed by fillers
C. Chin wing before mandibular advancement
D. Bone work before soft tissue
E. Maxillary advancement before genioplasty


Q7.
Which intervention most often creates the illusion of forward growth in photos but not in real world motion?

A. Mandibular advancement
B. Zygomatic osteotomy
C. Jawline filler
D. Chin wing osteotomy
E. Le Fort I advancement


Q8.
Which single change is most likely to worsen a vertically long face even if the jawline looks sharper?

A. Counterclockwise rotation
B. Chin wing osteotomy
C. Mandibular angle implants
D. Maxillary advancement
E. Infraorbital rim augmentation


SECTION B. FAILURE MODE DETECTION (8 QUESTIONS)​

Q9.
Which statement signals an unqualified evaluator?

A. Mandible follows maxilla
B. Bone sets the ceiling
C. Eye aesthetics are primarily soft tissue
D. Forward growth affects all thirds
E. Occlusion constrains aesthetics


Q10.
Which intervention has the highest probability of aging related aesthetic reversal?

A. Le Fort I advancement
B. Mandibular advancement
C. Zygomatic osteotomy
D. Buccal fat excision
E. Sliding genioplasty


Q11.
Which improvement cannot be made permanent without skeletal change?

A. Nasal width
B. Jawline definition
C. Negative canthal tilt
D. Skin texture
E. Lip fullness


Q12.
Which reasoning pattern is most dangerous in surgical planning?

A. Prioritizing airway
B. Considering occlusion
C. Maximizing angles without thirds analysis
D. Rejecting fillers
E. Accounting for soft tissue thickness


Q13.
Which feature is most often misdiagnosed as mandibular weakness?

A. Retruded chin
B. Vertical growth pattern
C. Zygomatic hypoplasia
D. Narrow palate
E. High gonial angle


Q14.
Which procedure most commonly produces regret when done early?

A. Sliding genioplasty
B. Buccal fat excision
C. Maxillary advancement
D. Zygomatic osteotomy
E. Mandibular advancement


Q15.
Which change most often masks skeletal deficiency rather than correcting it?

A. Rhinoplasty
B. Jawline filler
C. MMA
D. Zygomatic osteotomy
E. Infraorbital rim advancement


Q16.
Which metric is least reliable when evaluated from selfies alone?

A. Facial width to height
B. Gonial angle
C. Chin projection
D. Eye spacing
E. Nose length


SECTION C. RATIOS UNDER CONTEXT (5 QUESTIONS)​

Q17.
Which ratio becomes misleading without growth pattern analysis?

A. Facial width to height
B. Bizygomatic to bigonial
C. Gonial angle
D. Lower third proportion
E. Interpupillary distance


Q18.
Why can equal facial thirds still appear weak in males?

A. Excess soft tissue
B. Lack of lower third dominance
C. High nasal bridge
D. Eye color
E. Thin lips


Q19.
Which ratio shows the strongest sexual dimorphism across populations?

A. Nose width
B. Bizygomatic width
C. Gonial angle
D. Facial symmetry
E. Eye spacing


Q20.
Which proportion should never be optimized in isolation?

A. Chin projection
B. Ramus height
C. Mandibular plane angle
D. Eye spacing
E. Nasal length


Q21.
Which ratio most directly affects perceived facial strength in males?

A. Nose length to face height
B. Facial width to facial height
C. Eye spacing to face width
D. Chin height to lip height
E. Forehead height to midface height


SECTION D. PHENOTYPE AND POPULATION REASONING (5 QUESTIONS)​

Q22.
Which error is most common when evaluating non European phenotypes?

A. Ignoring symmetry
B. Overemphasizing harmony
C. Applying Caucasian cephalometric norms
D. Considering soft tissue thickness
E. Accounting for growth pattern


Q23.
Which trait best compensates for reduced nasal projection at the skeletal level?

A. Strong chin
B. Wide malar bones
C. Tall cranial vault
D. Thick lips
E. Long midface


Q24.
Which trait is least transferable across ethnic groups while maintaining attractiveness?

A. Symmetry
B. Forward growth
C. Eye color
D. Facial harmony
E. Proportional thirds


Q25.
Which population level statistic matters least in individual evaluation?

A. Average jaw projection
B. Average nasal width
C. Individual bone structure
D. Growth pattern
E. Occlusal class


Q26.
Which statement reflects qualified Looksmax evaluation?

A. One ideal face exists
B. Ratios override structure
C. Harmony is context dependent
D. Surgery equalizes all phenotypes
E. Masculinity is angle maximization


SCORING AND ELIMINATION LOGIC​

• Sections A and B are elimination rounds
• Any error in Q1 to Q8 or Q9 to Q12 is automatic fail
• Overall pass threshold 90 percent
• Section C allows one mistake
• Section D allows one mistake
• Any preference pattern favoring fillers or cosmetic masking triggers manual fail
@LTNUser @unkownincel

SECTION A. CONSTRAINED STRUCTURAL TRIAGE​


Q1. Correct answer: C. Zygomatic osteotomy
Logic: Flat midface and negative canthal tilt indicate eye support deficiency. Zygomatic advancement improves midface projection and orbital support without worsening an already long lower third. Mandibular or chin work would exacerbate vertical imbalance. Le Fort I risks elongation.


Q2. Correct answer: C. Mandibular angle implants
Logic: Angle implants sharpen profile views but widen the lower face frontally and age poorly. They do not correct growth vectors and often degrade harmony over time.


Q3. Correct answer: B. Mandibular advancement
Logic: Strong mandible with weak maxilla means advancing the mandible alone increases imbalance. Mandible follows maxilla. Violating this exaggerates disharmony.


Q4. Correct answer: B. Buccal fat excision
Logic: Outcome depends almost entirely on correct patient selection. Technical execution is trivial. Wrong diagnosis causes irreversible hollowing and premature aging.


Q5. Correct answer: C. Infraorbital rim advancement
Logic: Eye area perception is driven by bony support. Infraorbital advancement increases scleral support and eye openness without touching lids.


Q6. Correct answer: C. Chin wing before mandibular advancement
Logic: Chin wing is contouring. Mandibular advancement is foundational. Doing contour before structure violates hierarchy even if short term visuals improve.


Q7. Correct answer: C. Jawline filler
Logic: Fillers create photographic edge definition without changing skeletal projection. Motion and real world angles expose the illusion.


Q8. Correct answer: C. Mandibular angle implants
Logic: They increase vertical and lateral mass at the lower third, worsening long face appearance even if the jawline appears sharper.




SECTION B. FAILURE MODE DETECTION​


Q9. Correct answer: C. Eye aesthetics are primarily soft tissue
Logic: Eye aesthetics are structurally driven by orbital rims and zygoma. Soft tissue is secondary.


Q10. Correct answer: D. Buccal fat excision
Logic: Fat loss accelerates with age. Bone based changes are stable. Buccal removal has the highest reversal and regret rate.


Q11. Correct answer: C. Negative canthal tilt
Logic: Permanent correction requires changing lateral orbital rim position. Soft tissue methods relapse.


Q12. Correct answer: C. Maximizing angles without thirds analysis
Logic: Angle chasing ignores vertical balance and growth pattern. This is a classic unqualified error.


Q13. Correct answer: B. Vertical growth pattern
Logic: Long faces with downward growth mimic mandibular weakness even when sagittal projection is adequate.


Q14. Correct answer: B. Buccal fat excision
Logic: Early removal removes youthful fullness that cannot be restored naturally. Regret increases with age.


Q15. Correct answer: B. Jawline filler
Logic: It masks deficiency instead of correcting structure. Removal reveals unchanged bone.


Q16. Correct answer: B. Gonial angle
Logic: Selfies distort perspective and jaw angles heavily. Gonial angle requires standardized imaging.




SECTION C. RATIOS UNDER CONTEXT​


Q17. Correct answer: D. Lower third proportion
Logic: A long lower third can come from vertical growth, not projection. Ratio alone misleads without growth analysis.


Q18. Correct answer: B. Lack of lower third dominance
Logic: Equal thirds are neutral. Male faces require slightly dominant lower third for strength.


Q19. Correct answer: C. Gonial angle
Logic: Strong sexual dimorphism. Males have more acute angles across populations.


Q20. Correct answer: C. Mandibular plane angle
Logic: It interacts with maxilla, ramus height, and facial thirds. Isolated optimization breaks harmony.


Q21. Correct answer: B. Facial width to facial height
Logic: This ratio governs perceived robustness and strength more than localized measures.




SECTION D. PHENOTYPE AND POPULATION REASONING​


Q22. Correct answer: C. Applying Caucasian cephalometric norms
Logic: Different populations have different soft tissue thickness and skeletal baselines. Universal templates fail.


Q23. Correct answer: B. Wide malar bones
Logic: Malar width restores midface balance and eye support when nasal projection is reduced.


Q24. Correct answer: C. Eye color
Logic: Eye color attractiveness is population dependent. Symmetry and growth are universal.


Q25. Correct answer: B. Average nasal width
Logic: Population averages do not override individual bone structure and growth pattern.


Q26. Correct answer: C. Harmony is context dependent
Logic: Qualified evaluation adapts ratios and priorities to sex, phenotype, and structure.
Car Rage GIF
 

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