Scimex: Can Facial Plastic Surgeons Correctly Estimate Age From a Photograph? The
lack of scientific tools to translate perceptions – such as more
beautiful or rejuvenated – into numbers that can be analyzed is a
challenge in the field of facial plastic surgery and it can get in the
way of producing high-quality scientific publications.
A new article published online by JAMA Facial Plastic Surgery sought to validate an evaluation method that could help define the perception of facial age in scientific studies.
Denis
Souto Valente, M.D., of the Pontificia Universidade Católica do Rio
Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil, and coauthors enlisted plastic
surgeons to evaluate 70 photographs of patients and write down the
perceived age of patients.
As it turns out, three plastic surgeons
can estimate the average perceived age of a person within 10 months of
their chronological age by analyzing a photograph, the authors report.
“This
article addresses an issue that is important to facial plastic surgeons
and reveals how the results of rejuvenation procedures can be
assessed,” the study concludes.
The study has some limitations,
including the method relies solely on subjectivity and the intuitions of
specific plastic surgeons.