Influence of gender, ethnicity and makeup on age estimation by adults in the community

Recent history has witnessed an emerging social issue concerning children and teenagers appearing older than their age, reasons for which may include clothing, makeup, false identification, dating websites or social media. This has ramifications for statutory rape, whereby a sexual act takes place i...

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Main Author: Barnett, Rosalind
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55357/
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author Barnett, Rosalind
author_facet Barnett, Rosalind
author_sort Barnett, Rosalind
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Recent history has witnessed an emerging social issue concerning children and teenagers appearing older than their age, reasons for which may include clothing, makeup, false identification, dating websites or social media. This has ramifications for statutory rape, whereby a sexual act takes place involving a person under the age of consent, since many perpetrators claim they were unaware of their sexual partner’s age before participating. The current study investigated the ability of adults in the community to estimate the age of Asian and White 12, 14, 16 and 18-year-olds, with reference to the age, gender, and ethnicity of the participant and model, as well as the influence of makeup. Participants were exposed to photographs of 12 models at each age, whilst each female was presented once more with makeup. Participants were required to estimate the models’ age in a within-subjects design. Results showed that participants overestimated the age of all age-groups, with an average of 3.07 years older than the actual age. Paired samples t-tests found that this was most pronounced for White female and Asian male models, and females between 12 and 16-years-old with makeup on. Results of one-way ANOVA’s found that participant gender and age had no effect, but found significant differences between Asian and White participant responses. The study concluded that people cannot accurately estimate age using only facial cues, and that model gender, ethnicity and makeup, and participant ethnicity, significantly impact perceptions. This study has implications for the application of statutory rape laws and victim protection.
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spelling nottingham-553572025-02-28T14:16:16Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55357/ Influence of gender, ethnicity and makeup on age estimation by adults in the community Barnett, Rosalind Recent history has witnessed an emerging social issue concerning children and teenagers appearing older than their age, reasons for which may include clothing, makeup, false identification, dating websites or social media. This has ramifications for statutory rape, whereby a sexual act takes place involving a person under the age of consent, since many perpetrators claim they were unaware of their sexual partner’s age before participating. The current study investigated the ability of adults in the community to estimate the age of Asian and White 12, 14, 16 and 18-year-olds, with reference to the age, gender, and ethnicity of the participant and model, as well as the influence of makeup. Participants were exposed to photographs of 12 models at each age, whilst each female was presented once more with makeup. Participants were required to estimate the models’ age in a within-subjects design. Results showed that participants overestimated the age of all age-groups, with an average of 3.07 years older than the actual age. Paired samples t-tests found that this was most pronounced for White female and Asian male models, and females between 12 and 16-years-old with makeup on. Results of one-way ANOVA’s found that participant gender and age had no effect, but found significant differences between Asian and White participant responses. The study concluded that people cannot accurately estimate age using only facial cues, and that model gender, ethnicity and makeup, and participant ethnicity, significantly impact perceptions. This study has implications for the application of statutory rape laws and victim protection. 2018-12-13 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55357/1/Research%20Paper.pdf Barnett, Rosalind (2018) Influence of gender, ethnicity and makeup on age estimation by adults in the community. MSc(Res) thesis, University of Nottingham. Statutory Rape Age estimation Makeup Gender Ethnicity
spellingShingle Statutory Rape
Age estimation
Makeup
Gender
Ethnicity
Barnett, Rosalind
Influence of gender, ethnicity and makeup on age estimation by adults in the community
title Influence of gender, ethnicity and makeup on age estimation by adults in the community
title_full Influence of gender, ethnicity and makeup on age estimation by adults in the community
title_fullStr Influence of gender, ethnicity and makeup on age estimation by adults in the community
title_full_unstemmed Influence of gender, ethnicity and makeup on age estimation by adults in the community
title_short Influence of gender, ethnicity and makeup on age estimation by adults in the community
title_sort influence of gender, ethnicity and makeup on age estimation by adults in the community
topic Statutory Rape
Age estimation
Makeup
Gender
Ethnicity
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55357/