when you can fall for chains of silver
you can fall for chains of gold
you can fall for pretty strangers
and the promises they hold
In 2005 a team led by Leyvand's colleague Yael Eisenthal asked people to rate the attractiveness of faces in almost 200 photographs. Software then analysed the images, measuring distances between facial features and ratios such as that between facial width at eye and mouth level, and the thickness of the eyebrows. It compared these with the attractiveness ratings given by the volunteers to create a set of rules, known as the "beauty function", for assessing whether a face is attractive.Leyvand has now written a second piece of software that applies this algorithm to a facial image to make adjustments to features so that they more closely obey the rules. It then analyses the results to determine which changes have been successful, and discard any that don't work. Users can also adjust the severity of the changes.
Call me an insensitive pig
Insensitive pig!
but I still think she looks like Mark Knopfler. It's probably the headband.
