“Patients under age 40 take out their phones and tell me they don’t
like how they look,” said Dr. Boris Paskhover of Rutgers New Jersey
Medical School in Newark.
“They literally show me a selfie of themselves and complain about
their noses,” he told Reuters Health by phone. “I have to explain
that I understand they’re not happy but what they’re seeing is
distorted.”
According to a poll by the American Academy of Facial Plastic and
Reconstructive Surgeons, 42 percent of surgeons have seen patients
who want procedures to improve their selfies and pictures on social
media platforms.
Paskhover and colleagues explain in JAMA Facial Plastic Surgery that
the distortion happens in selfies because the face is such a short
distance from the camera lens.
In a recent study, they calculated distortion of facial features at
different camera distances and angles. They found that the perceived
nasal width increased as the camera moved closer to the face. At 12
inches away, for instance, selfies increased nasal size by 30
percent in males and 29 percent in females. At five feet, however,
the proportion of features is to real-life scale.
“At that standard portrait distance of five feet, everything evens
off,” Paskhover said. “That’s a classic portrait distance, which is
fascinating. Photographers have known this for decades.”
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Similar formulas can be created for other facial features as well,
Paskhover said. Men who want to emphasize a stronger chin or
chiseled jaw, for instance, could position the camera a certain way
up close. Similarly, women who want to emphasize their eyes or
deemphasize their chin or forehead, for instance, should tilt the
camera to accommodate the distortion.
“Some people offer advice and tips on these types of angles, just
from taking thousands of pictures,” he said. “Now there’s a model
that can explain it.”
Dr. Cemal Cingi of the Eskisehir Osmangazi University in Turkey, who
studies selfies and rhinoplasty trends but wasn’t involved with this
new research, told Reuters Health, “I talk to patients about
asymmetries before surgery and literally have them hold a mirror in
their hands before we schedule a procedure.”
“If camera phones continue to improve, maybe it’ll become (possible)
for people to take photos a little farther off from the face,” he
told Reuters Health by phone. “That may help people who are
displeased with how their nose looks bigger in the selfies they
take.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2G2l5EC JAMA Facial Plastic Surgery, online
March 1, 2018.
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