Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Selfies: Only the nose knows

- TOM AVRIL

It is the inescapabl­e 21st-century vexation of the vain. Smartphone­s allow a person to take selfies as fast as the index finger can click, yet from a dismayingl­y close distance that may leave the subject dissatisfi­ed.

Don’t fret, a team of Rutgers and Stanford University researcher­s says in a new analysis published last week. The culprit is distortion.

Using a mathematic­al model, the group found that in a selfie taken from 12 inches away, the nose appears 30 percent wider than in a photo taken from 5 feet.

The researcher­s undertook the analysis because plastic-surgery patients — who spent more than $16 billion on cosmetic procedures in 2016, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons — often cited their appearance in selfies as justificat­ion for getting a nose job.

Boris Paskhover, an assistant professor at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School’s department of otolaryngo­logy, wants to set the record straight: “Young adults are constantly taking selfies to post to social media and think those images are representa­tive of how they really look, which can have an impact on their emotional state. I want them to realize that when they take a selfie, they are in essence looking into a portable funhouse mirror.”

To calculate the degree of nasal distortion in up-close photos, Paskhover worked with Ohad Fried, a research fellow in Stanford’s computer science department. In addition to the 30 percent increase in the apparent width of the nose in selfies, the team also found that the close vantage point made the tip of the nose appear 7 percent wider.

Their findings were published in JAMA Facial Plastic Surgery.

In this social-media-obsessed world, Paskhover, who specialize­s in facial plastic and reconstruc­tive surgery, is not alone in seeing patients who are unhappy with their selfies.

In a 2017 poll, 55 percent of surgeons reported they had seen patients who sought plastic surgery in order to look better in selfies, the American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstruc­tive Surgeons said.

Yet nose jobs, formally called rhinoplast­y, appear to be on the wane, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. Surgeons performed 218,924 of the procedures in 2017, down 2 percent from the year before, and down a whopping 44 percent since 2000.

Maybe selfie-snappers are coming to grips with reality.

 ?? Invision/AP/CHARLES SYKES ?? Actress Nicole Kidman (right) takes a selfie with fan at the Oscars earlier this month.
Invision/AP/CHARLES SYKES Actress Nicole Kidman (right) takes a selfie with fan at the Oscars earlier this month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States