Tuesday, January 03, 2006

The Science of Cute

I'm not sure what this NY Times article on the science of cuteness has to do with anything but it's an interesting read nonetheless.
Scientists who study the evolution of visual signaling have identified a wide and still expanding assortment of features and behaviors that make something look cute: bright forward-facing eyes set low on a big round face, a pair of big round ears, floppy limbs and a side-to-side, teeter-totter gait, among many others.

Cute cues are those that indicate extreme youth, vulnerability, harmlessness and need, scientists say, and attending to them closely makes good Darwinian sense. As a species whose youngest members are so pathetically helpless they can't lift their heads to suckle without adult supervision, human beings must be wired to respond quickly and gamely to any and all signs of infantile desire.

The human cuteness detector is set at such a low bar, researchers said, that it sweeps in and deems cute practically anything remotely resembling a human baby or a part thereof, and so ends up including the young of virtually every mammalian species, fuzzy-headed birds like Japanese cranes, woolly bear caterpillars, a bobbing balloon, a big round rock stacked on a smaller rock, a colon, a hyphen and a close parenthesis typed in succession.
...
Cuteness is distinct from beauty, researchers say, emphasizing rounded over sculptured, soft over refined, clumsy over quick. Beauty attracts admiration and demands a pedestal; cuteness attracts affection and demands a lap. Beauty is rare and brutal, despoiled by a single pimple. Cuteness is commonplace and generous, content on occasion to cosegregate with homeliness.

2 Comments:

>>>>>> Blogger BrooklynKat said...

The Japanese have been perfecting this idea for years. They even have a word for it, "kawaii." Think Hello Kitty, anime, or artists like Yoshitomo Nara, and Takashi Murakami (most famous in the U.S. for his Louis Vuitton bags). Finally a little science behind it!

1/03/2006 4:54 PM  
>>>>>> Blogger Candace said...

Everytime one of those turbo-cute images (like a baby elephant, a baby rhino, oh hell, a baby anything) comes up on the TV screen, my husband says, "We're not getting one!" And when a super model's image appears I always say, "We're not getting one!" It works for us...
Great blog here!

1/05/2006 4:30 PM  

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