Summary: New research reveals that lip size significantly influences how people perceive facial attractiveness, and these perceptions vary based on gender and exposure. Female participants preferred plumper lips on female faces, while males preferred natural lip size, suggesting gendered beauty standards.
The study also found that recent exposure to altered lip sizes influenced participants’ future attractiveness ratings, even when lips were shown in isolation. These results suggest cosmetic trends like lip augmentation may shift societal beauty norms and potentially lead to lip-focused body image issues.
Key Facts:
- Gendered Judgments: Women favored plumper lips on female faces, while men preferred natural-sized lips.
- Visual Adaptation: Exposure to altered lip sizes changes future perceptions of attractiveness.
- Independent Encoding: The brain registers lip size separately from other facial features.
Source: University of Sydney
A new study by psychologists has shed light on the way lip size could influence perceptions of facial attractiveness.
Led by Professor David Alais in the School of Psychology at the University of Sydney, researchers have uncovered gender-specific biases and the potential influence of cosmetic procedures on Western perceptions of beauty.

The study used digitally manipulated images to alter lip size on both male- and female-appearing faces and asked participants to ra
te their attractiveness. The results showed a difference in preference for lip size that was dependent on recent experience and some surprising gender differences.
The findings are published today in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Main findings
- Overall findings: Pooling all observers, the highest ratings were for male images with thinner lips and female images with plumper lips.
- Gendered preferences: Female participants showed an even stronger preference for plumper lips when viewing images of female faces, while male participants preferred female faces with unaltered lips. This suggests that attractiveness judgments are shaped by the observer’s own gender.
- The adaptation effect: Exposure to a face with lips altered to be plumper or thinner influenced subsequent attractiveness judgements of new faces. Exposure to plump lips led to future higher ratings for faces with plump lips, and exposure to thin lips led to future higher ratings for thin-lipped faces. Psychologists have seen this adaptation effect influence visual preference for a range of stimuli, from art to food preference.
- Lips in isolation: Interestingly, the study found that adaptation to lips alone, without the context of the whole face, also produced shifts in attractiveness ratings, suggesting that lip size is encoded by the brain as a distinct feature, separate from the overall facial structure.
Implications for body image
Professor Alais, who specialises in visual perception and cognitive neuroscience, said these findings have potential implications for the growing popularity of cosmetic procedures, particularly lip augmentation.
Not only do the results indicate that lip plumping may primarily appeal to women, but also that exposure to faces with artificially enhanced lip sizes could lead to “lip dysmorphia”, where one’s perception of what is considered attractive shifts towards a new plumper norm.
“Our research highlights the subjective nature of beauty and the powerful influence of social and cultural factors,” Professor Alais said.
“As cosmetic procedures become more accessible, it’s crucial to understand how these interventions can shape our perceptions and potentially lead to unrealistic beauty standards.”
Method and results
Professor Alais, working with Associate Professor Jessica Taubert at the University of Queensland, recruited 32 students – 16 female and 16 male – for the experiments. The participants were shown images of a digitally manipulated proxy image for a human face with alterations around a ‘norm’.
Overall, participants were shown 168 faces, representing seven lip sizes with lips thinner or plumper than the norm. Participants were given 1.25s to register how relatively attractive they found each image.
While the general results show participants thought slightly plumper lips were more attractive on the female face and slightly thinner lips more attractive on a male face, when disaggregated by gender, men preferred a female face with natural lip size image, with women preferring plumper lips.
Next steps
“While not directly part of this study, the results suggest a complex interplay between social conditioning and gender,” Professor Alais said.
“This study provides valuable insights into how people respond to facial features based on immediately prior as well as acculturated visual experience,” he said.
“Further research is needed to explore the long-term effects of cosmetic procedures on body image and the potential for visual adaptation to contribute to body dysmorphia.”
About this beauty perception and psychology research news
Author: Marcus Strom
Source: University of Sydney
Contact: Marcus Strom – University of Sydney
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News
Original Research: Open access.
“Distortions of lip size bias perceived facial attractiveness” by David Alais et al. Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences
Abstract
Distortions of lip size bias perceived facial attractiveness
Perceiving faces as attractive or not guides decisions to approach or date a person and can sway opinions in recruiting and legal proceedings. However, the mechanisms underlying facial attractiveness are not fully understood.
While popular models of face recognition emphasize holistic processing, individuals often attempt to enhance their own attractiveness in feature-centric ways (cosmetic surgery, make-up, injectables).
Here, we use a local feature manipulation (lip expansion/contraction) and show that it alters the perceived attractiveness of male and female faces.
Females showed peak preference for expanded lips when viewing female faces; males showed peak preference for contracted lips when viewing male faces. Distortions of lip size therefore mostly influence own-gender attractiveness ratings.
Next, we tested whether visual adaptation to expanded or contracted lips would bias subsequent attractiveness judgements, and found peak attractiveness shifted towards the adapted lip size (e.g. expanded lips were preferred following exposure to expanded lips). Viewing faces with artificially altered lip size therefore powerfully influences attractiveness judgements. Outside the laboratory, cosmetic procedures to increase lip size are popular. Our findings indicate that (i) lip plumping will mostly appeal to women rather than men (who prefer thinner lips), and (ii) exposure to expanded lips renormalizes attractiveness to a larger baseline and may lead to lip dysmorphia.