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60
Mostly True Earth

Newborn infants spend more time looking at attractive faces compared to unattractive ones.

The claim that newborn infants stare longer at attractive faces is supported by a study referenced in Healthline, which indicates that infants spent more time looking at faces deemed attractive by adults. This suggests a possible innate preference, although the evidence is not conclusive due to medium reliability of the sources and the historical nature of the experiment. Therefore, the claim is plausible but not definitively proven.

March 27, 2026 Language: en 1 claim analyzed

Individual Claims

60
Mostly True psychology
Newborn infants stare at attractive faces longer than unattractive ones.
There is some evidence from a historical study that infants prefer attractive faces, but the evidence's reliability is medium, and there is no recent or highly authoritative source confirming the claim.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score 60
Web Consensus Weight 50
Source Quality Score 50
Source Quality Weight 25
Llm Reasoning Score 70
Llm Reasoning Weight 25
Weighted Total 60
Evidence Summary 3 web sources support a historical study on infants' preference for attractive faces.

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