- Physical attractiveness
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Physical attractiveness refers to a person's physical traits which are perceived to be aesthetically pleasing or beautiful. The term often implies sexual attractiveness or desirability, but can also be distinct from the two; for example, humans may regard the young as attractive for various reasons, but without sexual attraction. There are many factors which influence one person's attraction to another, with physical aspects being one of them. In many cases, humans attribute positive characteristics, such as intelligence and honesty, to physically attractive people without consciously realizing it.[5]
Men, on average, tend to be attracted by women who are shorter than they are, have a youthful appearance and exhibit features such as a symmetrical face,[6] full breasts, full lips, and a low waist-hip ratio.[7] Women, on average, tend to be more attracted to men who are taller than they are, display a high-degree of facial symmetry, masculine facial dimorphism,[8][9] and who have broad shoulders, a relatively narrow waist and V-shaped torso.
Contents
General contributing factors
Generally, physical attraction can be studied from a number of perspectives, including universal perceptions common to all human cultures, cultural and social aspects, and individual subjective preferences. Additionally, the perception of attractiveness can have a significant effect on how people are judged in terms of employment or social opportunities, friendship, sexual behavior, and marriage.[10]
Some physical features are attractive in both men and women, particularly bodily[11] and facial symmetry,[12][13][14][15] although one contrary report suggests that "absolute flawlessness" with perfect symmetry can be "disturbing".[16] Symmetry may be evolutionarily beneficial as a sign of health because asymmetry "signals past illness or injury".[17] One study suggested people were able to "gauge beauty at a subliminal level" by seeing only a glimpse of a picture for one-hundredth of a second.[17] Other important factors include youthfulness, skin clarity and smoothness of skin; and "vivid color" in the eyes and hair.[12] But there are numerous differences based on gender.
Male physical attractiveness
Women, on average, tend to be more attracted to men who have a relatively narrow waist, a V-shaped torso, and broad shoulders, are taller than they are, and display a high-degree of facial symmetry, and relatively masculine facial dimorphism.[8][9]
According to one source, the most important factor that attracts gay men to other males is the man's physical attractiveness.[18]
Facial attractiveness
Sexual dimorphism
Studies have shown that ovulating heterosexual women (and homosexual men) prefer faces with masculine traits associated with increased exposure to testosterone during key developmental stages, such as prominent and broad cheekbones,[19] a relatively longer lower face, developed brows, and chiseled jawlines. The masculinity of male faces (and the femininity of female faces) is described as a sexual dimorphism. Female respondents in the follicular phase of their menstrual cycle (n = 55) were significantly more likely to choose a masculine face than those in menses and luteal phases (n = 84),[20] (or in those taking hormonal contraception).[8][9][21] It is suggested that the masculinity of facial features is a reliable indication of good health, or, alternatively, that masculine-looking males are more likely to achieve high status.[22] However, the correlation between attractive facial features and health has been questioned.[23] Also, females tend to prefer masculine facial traits more for short-term partners than for long-term partners. Sociocultural factors, such as self-perceived attractiveness, status in a relationship and degree of gender-conformity, have been reported to play a role in female preferences for male faces.[24] Studies have found that women who perceive themselves as physically attractive are more likely to choose men with masculine facial dimorphism, than are women who perceive themselves as physically unattractive.[25] In men, facial masculinity significantly correlates with facial symmetry—it has been suggested that both are signals of developmental stability and genetic health.[26] One study called into question the importance of facial masculinity in physical attractiveness in men arguing that when perceived health, which is factored into facial masculinity, is discounted it makes little difference in physical attractiveness.[27] In a cross-country study involving 4,794 women in their early twenties, a difference was found in women's average "masculinity preference" between countries.[28]
Symmetry
Symmetrical faces and bodies may be signs of good inheritance to women of child-bearing age seeking to create healthy offspring. Studies suggest women are more attracted to men with symmetrical faces,[29] and symmetrical faces correlate with long term mental performance[30] and are an indication that a man has experienced "fewer genetic and environmental disturbances such as diseases, toxins, malnutrition or genetic mutations" while growing.[30] Since achieving symmetry is a difficult task during human growth, requiring literally billions of cell reproductions while maintaining a parallel structure, achieving symmetry is a visible signal of genetic health.
Studies have also suggested that women at peak fertility were more likely to fantasize about men with greater facial symmetry,[31] and other studies have found that male symmetry was the only factor that could significantly predict the likelihood of a woman experiencing orgasm during sex. Women with partners possessing greater symmetry reported significantly more copulatory female orgasms than were reported by women with partners possessing low symmetry, even with many potential confounding variables controlled.[32] This finding has been found to hold across different cultures. It has been argued that masculine facial dimorphism (in men) and symmetry in faces are signals advertising genetic quality in potential mates.[33] Low facial and body fluctuating asymmetry may indicate good health and intelligence, which are desirable features.[29] Studies have found that women who perceive themselves as being more physically attractive are more likely to favor men with a higher degree of facial symmetry, than are women who perceive themselves as being less physically attractive.[25] It has been found that symmetrical men (and women) have a tendency to begin to have sexual intercourse at an earlier age, to have more sexual partners, and to have more one-night stands. They are also more likely to be prone to infidelity.[34] A study of quarterbacks in the National Football League found a positive correlation between facial symmetry and salaries.[13]
Body scent
A number of double-blind studies have found that women prefer the scent of men who are rated as facially attractive.[35] For example, a study by Anja Rikowski and Karl Grammer had individuals rate the scent of t-shirts slept in by test subjects. The photographs of those subjects were independently rated, and Rikowski and Grammar found that both males and females were more attracted to the natural scent of individuals who had been rated by consensus as facially attractive.[36] Additionally, it has also been shown that women have a preference for the scent of men with more symmetrical faces, and that women's preference for the scent of more symmetrical men is strongest during the most fertile period of their menstrual cycle. Within the set of normally cycling women, individual women's preference for the scent of men with high facial symmetry correlated with their probability of conception.[37]
Genetics
New studies are exploring the genetic basis behind such issues as facial symmetry and body scent and how they influence physical attraction. In one study in which women wore men's T-shirts, researchers found that women were more attracted to the bodily scents in shirts of men who had a different type of gene section within the DNA called Major histocompatibility complex (MHC).[38] MHC is a large gene area within the DNA of vertebrates which encodes proteins dealing with the immune system[39] and which influences individual bodily odors.[40] One hypothesis is that humans are naturally attracted by the sense of smell and taste to others with dissimilar MHC sections, perhaps to avoid subsequent inbreeding while increasing the genetic diversity of offspring.[39] Further, there are studies showing that women's natural attraction for men with dissimilar immune profiles can be distorted with use of birth control pills.[40] Other research findings involving the genetic foundations of attraction suggest that MHC heterozygosity positively correlates with male facial attractiveness. Women judge the faces of men who are heterozygous at all three MHC loci to be more attractive than the faces of men who are homozygous at one or more of these loci. Additionally, a second experiment with genotyped women raters, found these preferences were independent of the degree of MHC similarity between the men and the female rater. With MHC heterozygosity independently seen as a genetic advantage, the results suggest that facial attractiveness in men may be a measure of genetic quality.[41][42]
Youth
For the Romans especially, "beardlessness" and "smooth young bodies" were considered beautiful to both men and women.[43] For Greek and Roman men, the most desirable traits of boys were their "youth" and "hairlessness". Pubescent boys were considered a socially appropriate object of male desire, while post-pubescent boys were considered to be "ἔξωροι" or "past the prime".[43] This was largely in the context of pederastry (adult male interest in adolescent boys).
Today, men and women's attitudes towards male beauty has changed. For example, body hair on men may even be preferred (see below).
Waist-to-chest ratio
The mesomorphic physique of a slim waist, broad shoulders and muscular chest are often found to be attractive.[44] When asked to rate other men, both heterosexual and homosexual men found low waist-to-chest ratios (WCR) to be more attractive on other men with the gay men showing a preference for lower WCR (more V-shaped) than the straight men.[45]
Genitalia
Studies based in China, England, the United States, Italy, New Zealand, Sweden, Spain, and France have suggested that women consider men more attractive whose erect penis is longer and thicker.[46]
Height and erect posture
Females' sexual attraction towards males may be determined by the height of the man.[47] Height in men is associated with status or wealth in many cultures (in particular those where malnutrition is common),[48] which is beneficial to women romantically involved with them. One study conducted of women's personal ads support the existence of this preference; the study found that in ads requesting height in a mate, 80% requested a height of 6 feet (1.8 m) or taller.[48] However, this percentage was only of ads specifying height, and therefore possibly self-selected and/or biased by a third factor such as female height. Recent studies have shown that heterosexual women often prefer men taller than they are, rather than a man with above average height. While women usually desire men to be at least the same height as themselves or taller, several other factors also determine male attractiveness, and the male-taller norm is not universal.[49] In certain non-Western cultures, the relative heights of partners have been shown to be irrelevant in their choice of mate, which suggests that Western height preferences may be sociocultural, rather than genetic, in nature.[49] Professor Adam Eyre-Walker, from the University of Sussex, stated that there is, as yet, no evidence that these preferences are evolutionary preferences, as opposed to merely cultural preferences.[50]
Additionally, women seem more receptive to an erect posture than men, though both prefer it as an element of beauty.[48] According to one study (Yee N., 2002), gay men who identify as "Only Tops" tend to prefer shorter men, while gay men who identify as "Only Bottoms" tend to prefer taller men.[51]
Hairiness
Studies based in the United States, New Zealand, and China have shown that women rate men with no body hair as most attractive, and that attractiveness ratings decline as hirsutism increases.[52][53] Another study, however, found that moderate amounts of trunk hair on men was most attractive, to the sample of British and Sri Lankan women.[54] Further, a degree of hirsuteness (hairiness) and a waist-to-shoulder ratio of 0.6 is often preferred, when combined with a mesomorphic physique.[54]
In a study using Finnish women, women with hairy fathers were more likely to prefer hairy men, suggesting that preference for hairy men is either the result of genetics or imprinting.[55] Among gay men, another study (Yee N., 2002) reported gay males who identify as "Only Tops" prefer less hairy men, while gay males who identify as "Only Bottoms" prefer hairier men.[51]
Skin color
Testosterone has been shown to darken skin color in laboratory experiments.[56] In his foreword to Peter Frost's 2005 Fair Women, Dark Men, University of Washington sociologist Pierre L. van den Berghe writes: "Although virtually all cultures express a marked preference for fair female skin, even those with little or no exposure to European imperialism, and even those whose members are heavily pigmented, many are indifferent to male pigmentation or even prefer men to be darker."[57]
According one study (Yee N., 2002), gay men who identify as "Only Tops" tend to prefer lighter-skinned men while gay men who identify as "Only Bottoms" tend to prefer darker-skinned men.[51]
Female physical attractiveness
Attractiveness research indicates that men tend to be attracted to young[59] and beautiful women[60] with bodily symmetry.[61] Rather than decreasing it, modernity has only increased the emphasis men place on women's looks.[62] Evolutionary psychologists attribute such attraction to an evaluation of the fertility potential in a prospective mate.[59]
Facial features
See also: Cuteness and KoinophiliaAttractiveness research has attempted to determine which facial aspects communicate attractiveness. Facial symmetry has been shown to be considered attractive in women,[64][65] and men have been found to prefer full lips,[66] clear smooth skin, and clear eyes.[59] The shape of the face in terms of "how everything hangs together" is an important determinant of beauty.[67] A University of Toronto study found correlations between facial measurements and attractiveness; researchers varied the distance between eyes, and between eyes and mouth, in different drawings of the same female face, and had the drawings evaluated; they found there were ideal proportions perceived as attractive (see photo).[63] These proportions (46% and 36%) were close to the average of all female profiles.[63] Women with thick, dark limbal rings in their eyes have also been found to be more attractive. The explanation given is that because the ring tends to fade with age and medical problems, a prominent limbal ring gives an honest indicator of youth.[68]
In another cross-cultural study, more neotenized (i.e., youthful looking) female faces were found to be most attractive to men while less neotenized female faces were found to be less attractive to men, regardless of the females' actual age.[69] One of these desired traits was a small jaw.[70] In a study of Italian women who have won beauty competitions, it was found that the Italian women who won the beauty competitions had faces characterized by more "babyness" traits compared to the "normal" women used as a reference.[71]
Michael R. Cunningham of the Department of Psychology at the University of Louisville found, using a panel of "Asian", "Hispanic" and "White" judges, that the "Asian", "Hispanic" and "White" female faces found most attractive were those that had "neonate large eyes, greater distance between eyes, and small noses"[72] and his study led him to conclude that "large eyes" were the most "effective" of the "neonate cues".[72] Cunningham also said that "shiny" hair may be indicative of "neonate vitality".[72] Using a panel of "Blacks" and "Whites" as judges, Cunningham found more neotenous faces were perceived as having both higher "femininity" and "sociability".[72] In contrast, Cunningham found that faces that were "low in neoteny" were judged as "intimidating".[72] Cunningham noted a "difference" in the preferences of "Asian" and "White" judges with "Asian" judges preferring women with "less mature faces" and smaller mouths than the "White" judges.[72] Cunningham hypothesized that this difference in preference may stem from "ethnocentrism" since "Asian faces possess those qualities", so Cunningham re-analyzed the data with "11 Asian targets excluded" and concluded that "ethnocentrism was not a primary determinant of Asian preferences."[72] Rather than finding evidence for purely "neonate" faces being most appealing, Cunningham found faces with "sexually-mature" features at the "periphery" of the face combined with "neonate" features in the "center of the face" most appealing in men and women.[72] Upon analyzing the results of his study Cunningham concluded that preference for "neonate features may display the least cross-cultural variability" in terms of "attractiveness ratings".[72] and, in another study, Cunningham concluded that there exists a large agreement on the characteristics of an attractive face.[73][74]
In computer face averaging tests, women with averaged faces have been shown to be considered more attractive.[15][75] This is possibly due to average features being more familiar and, therefore, more comfortable.[64]
Commenting on the prevalence of whiteness in supposed beauty ideals in his book White Lies: Race and the Myth of Whiteness, Maurice Berger notes that the schematic rendering in the idealized face of a notable study conducted with American subjects had "straight hair," "light skin," "almond-shaped eyes," "thin, arched eyebrows," "a long, thin nose, closely set and tiny nostrils" and "a large mouth and thin lips",[76] though the author of the study noted the consistency between his results and those conducted on other races.
One psychologist speculated there were two opposing principles of female beauty: prettiness and rarity. So on average, symmetrical features are one ideal, while unusual, stand-out features are another.[77] A study performed by the University of Toronto found that the most attractive facial dimensions were those found in the average female face. However, that particular University of Toronto study looked only at white women.[78]
Youthfulness
Cross-cultural data shows that the reproductive success of women is tied to their youth and physical attractiveness[79] such as the pre-industrial Sami where the most reproductively successful women were 15 years younger than their man.[80] One study covering 37 cultures showed that, on average, a woman was 2.5 years younger than her male partner, with the age difference in Nigeria and Zambia being at the far extreme of 6.5 to 7.5 years. As men age, they tend to seek a mate who is even younger.[59] The common explanation for this preference is that men have evolved to be attracted to women with high child-bearing potential and therefore prefer young women. In a study performed in the United States using male college students, the mean age expressed as ideal for a wife was to be 16.87 years old, while 17.76 was the mean ideal age for a brief sexual encounter.[81] In a study of male penile tumescence, men were found most aroused by pictures of young adult females.[82] According to cultural anthropologist Dr. Paula E. Drew who has held tenured positions at two universities in Iran, "Many (Iranian men) speak openly, with disgust and derision, of the effects of pregnancy and the aging process on the female body."[83]
Breasts
Research has shown some that men enjoy viewing women's breasts,[84] and another study showed that men prefer symmetrical breasts[61][85] but some studies show men preferring large, firm breasts,[86][87] while a contradictory study of British undergraduates found men preferring small breasts on women.[88] Cross-culturally, another study found "high variability" regarding the ideal breast size.[88] Some researchers have speculated that a preference for larger breasts may have developed in Western societies, because women with larger breasts tend to have higher levels of the hormones oestradial and progesterone, which both promote fertility.[89]
Breast symmetry may be particularly sensitive to developmental disturbances and the symmetry differences for breasts are large compared to other body parts. Women who have more symmetrical breasts tend to have more children.[90]
Buttocks
Biological anthropologist, Helen B. Fisher of the Center for Human Evolution Studies in the Department of Anthropology of Rutgers University, said that, "perhaps", "the fleshy, rounded buttocks... attracted males during rear-entry intercourse."[91] Bobbi S. Low et al. of the School of Natural Resources and Environment at the University of Michigan, said the female "buttocks evolved in the context of females competing for the attention and parental commitment of powerful resource-controlling males" as an "honest display of fat reserves" that could not be confused with another type of tissue,[92] although T. M. Caro, professor in the Center for Population Biology and the Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology, at University of California, Davis, rejected that as being a necessary conclusion, stating that female fatty deposits on the hips improve "individual fitness of the female", regardless of sexual selection.[92]
Body mass
Body Mass Index (BMI) is an important determinant to the perception of beauty.[93] Even though the Western ideal is for a thin woman, some cultures prefer plumper women,[72][94] so attraction for a particular BMI appears to be merely a cultural artifact.[94] The attraction for a proportionate body also influences an appeal for erect posture.[88]
In the United States, women overestimate men's preferences for thinness in a mate. In one study, American women were asked to choose what their ideal build was and what they thought the build most attractive to men was. Women chose slimmer than average figures for both choices. When American men were independently asked to choose the female build most attractive to them, the men chose figures of average build. This indicates that women may be misled as to how thin men prefer women to be.[94] Some speculate that thinness as a beauty standard is one way in which women judge each other.[77] A reporter surmised that thinness is prized among women as a "sign of independence, strength and achievement."[77] Some implicated the fashion industry for the promulgation of the notion of thinness as attractive.[95]
Waist–hip ratio
Main article: Waist–hip ratioEthnic groups vary with regard to their ideal waist-to-hip ratio for women,[96] ranging from 0.6 in China,[97] to 0.8 or 0.9 in parts of South America and Africa,[98][99][100] and divergent preferences based on ethnicity, rather than nationality, have also been noted.[101][102] A cross-cultural analysis that found isolated peoples preferring high WHR (0.9) over a low WHR (0.7) suggested that many such "cross-cultural" tests "may have only reflected the pervasiveness of Western media";[103] however many evolutionary psychologists believe preference for low WHR is a signal for fertility and biologically based.[104]
Height
Most men tend to be taller than their female partner.[105] It has been found that, in Western societies, most men prefer shorter women, tend to view taller women as less attractive.[106] and people view couples where the woman is taller to be less ideal.[106] Women who are 0.7 to 1.7 standard deviations below the mean female height have been reported to be the most reproductively successful,[107] since fewer tall women get married compared to shorter women.[106]
However, in some non-Western cultures, height is irrelevant in choosing a mate, which suggests that the preference among Western men for women shorter than themselves may be sociocultural in nature.[49]
Leg-to-body ratio
A study using Polish participants by Sorokowski found 5% longer legs than an individual used as a reference was considered most attractive.[108] The study concluded this preference might stem from the influence of leggy runway models.[109] The Sorokowski study was criticized for using a picture of the same person with digitally altered leg lengths which Dr. Marco Bertamini felt were unrealistic.[110]
Another study using British and American participants, found "mid-ranging" leg-to-body ratios to be most ideal.[111]
A study by Swami et al. of British male and female undergraduates showed a preference for men with legs as long as the rest of their body and women with 40% longer legs than the rest of their body.[112] The researcher concluded that this preference might be influenced by American culture where long legged women are portrayed as more attractive.[112] The Swami et al. study was criticized for using a picture of the same person with digitally altered leg lengths which Marco Bertamini felt were unrealistic.[110] Bertamini also criticized the Swami study for only changing the leg length while keeping the arm length constant.[110] Bertamini's own study which used stick figures mirrored Swami's study, however, by finding a preference for leggier women.[110]
According to some studies, most men prefer women with small feet,[113][114] such as in ancient China where foot binding was practiced.[115]
Hair
Men have been found to prefer long-haired women.[59][116][117] An evolutionary psychology explanation for this is that malnutrition and deficiencies in minerals and vitamins causes loss of hair or hair changes. Hair therefore indicates health and nutrition during the last 2–3 years. Lustrous hair is also often a cross-cultural preference.[118]
One study reported non-Asian men to prefer blondes and Asian men to prefer black-haired women.[117]
Movement patterns
The way an individual moves can indicate health and even age and influence attractiveness.[118]
Skin tone
Main article: Human skin color#Social status and racismA preference for lighter-skinned women has remained prevalent over time, even in cultures without European contact, though exceptions have been found.[119] Anthropologist Peter Frost stated that since higher-ranking men were allowed to marry the perceived more attractive women, who tended to have fair skin, the upper classes of a society generally tended to develop a lighter complexion than the lower classes by sexual selection (see also Fisherian runaway).[57][119][120] In contrast, one study on men of the Bikosso tribe in Cameroon found no preference for attractiveness of females based on lighter skin color, bringing into question the universality of earlier studies that had exclusively focused on skin color preferences among non-African populations.[120]
Today, skin bleaching is not uncommon in parts of the world such as Africa,[121] and a preference for lighter-skinned women generally holds true for African Americans,[122] Latin Americans,[123] and Asians.[124] One exception to this has been in contemporary Western culture, where tanned skin used to be associated with the sun-exposed manual labor of the lower-class, but has generally been considered more attractive and healthier since the mid-20th century.[125][126][127][128][129]
Skin radiance
Research has shown that skin radiance [130] or glowing skin indicates health [131] thus skin radiance influences perception of beauty and physical attractiveness.
Other determinants
There has been research suggesting that women at the "fertile stage" of the menstrual cycle appear more attractive to single unattached men, but it is not clear exactly how this process works.[132]
Possible gender differences for preferences
For both men and women, there appear to be universal criteria of attractiveness both within and across cultures and ethnic groups.[6][133] Some studies have concluded that, in particular with regard to long-term relationships, men place a higher emphasis on physical attractiveness in a partner than women do.[134][135][136][137][138] On the other hand, some studies have found little difference between men and women in terms of the weight they place on physical characteristics when choosing partners for short-term relationships,[139][140][141][142] in particular with regard to their implicit, as opposed to explicitly articulated, preferences.[143] Other recent studies continue to find sex differences for long-term relationships.[144][145][146][147]
Some evolutionary psychologists, including David Buss, have argued that this long-term relationship difference may be consequence of ancestral humans who selected partners based on secondary sexual characteristics, as well as general indicators of fitness which allowed for greater reproductive success as a result of higher fertility in those partners,[148] although a male's ability to provide resources for offspring was likely signaled less by physical features.[136] It is argued that the most prominent indicator of fertility in women is youth,[149][150] while the traits in a man which enhance reproductive success are proxies for his ability to accrue resources and protect.[150]
Studies have shown that women pay greater attention to physical traits than they do directly to earning capability or potential to commit,[151] including muscularity, fitness and masculinity of features; the latter preference was observed to vary during a woman's period, with women preferring more masculine features during the late-follicular (fertile) phase of the menstrual cycle.[152][153] Additionally, women process physical attractiveness differently, paying attention to both individual features and the aesthetic effect of the whole face.[154] A 2003 study in the area concluded that heterosexual women are about equally aroused when viewing men or women. Heterosexual men were only aroused by women. This study verified arousal in the test subjects by connecting them to brain imaging devices.[155][156][157][158] Notably, the same study reported arousal for women upon viewing animals mating.
It has been shown that women prefer men with a more masculine facial dimorphism during the fertile period of the menstrual cycle and men with a more feminine facial dimorphism during other parts of the cycle.[159] This distinction supports the sexy son hypothesis, which posits that it is evolutionarily advantageous for women to select potential fathers who are more genetically attractive,[160] rather than the best caregivers.[161]
According to strategic pluralism theory, men may have correspondingly evolved to pursue reproductive strategies that are contingent on their own physical attractiveness. More physically attractive men accrue reproductive benefits from spending more time seeking multiple mating partners and relatively less time investing in offspring. In contrast, the reproductive effort of physically less attractive men, who therefore will not have the same mating opportunities, is better allocated either to investing heavily in accruing resources, or investing in their mates and offspring and spending relatively less time seeking additional mates.[162]
Racial bias
Leslie A. Zebrowitz et al. professor of psychology at Brandeis University used 20 white faces, 24 black faces and 24 Korean faces in an experiment to determine that there was a greater average preference for "within race" faces (0.78) than "between race" faces (0.64).[163] Judging Group own race
faceWhite-Black
mixed faceWhite-Korean
mixed faceBlack-Korean
mixed faceWhite 0.72 0.69 0.47 0.23 Black 0.77 0.74 0.69 0.75 Korean 0.85 0.79 0.72 0.69 People are usually attracted to people who look like them[164] and they usually evaluate faces that exhibit features of their own ethnic or racial group as being more attractive.[117] Although both men and women use children's "facial resemblance" to themselves in "attractiveness judgments," a greater percentage of women in one study (37% n=30) found hypothetical children whose faces were "self-morphs" of themselves as most attractive when compared to men (30% n=23).[165] One report in The Guardian suggested there was a "Caucasian beauty standard" spreading worldwide because of the proliferation of the Western entertainment industry.[6]
Facial similarity
Facial similarity is generally judged to be attractive: the more similar the judged person is toward the judging person, the more it is liked. However, this effect can be reversed. This might depend on how attractivity is conceptualized: similar members (compared to dissimilar ones) of the opposite sex are judged as more likeable in a prosocial sense. Again, findings are more ambiguous when looking for the desiring, pleasure related component of attractivness.[166] This might be influenced by the measure one uses (subjective ratings can differ from the way one actually reacts) and by situational factors: while men usually prefer women whose face resembles their own, this effect can reverse under stress, when dissimilar females are preferred.[167]
Social effects
Perceptions of physical attractiveness contribute to generalized assumptions based on those attractions. Across cultures, what is beautiful is assumed to be good; attractive people are assumed to be more extroverted, popular, and happy. This could lead to a self-fulfilling prophecy, as from a young age, attractive people receive more attention that helps them develop these characteristics.[168][169] In one study, beautiful people were found to be generally happier than less beautiful or plain people, perhaps because beauty led to increased economic benefits which partially explained the increased happiness.[67]
However, attractiveness varies by society; in ancient China, a small foot was considered attractive, so foot binding was practiced by confining young girls' feet in tightly bound shoes to prevent the feet from growing to normal size.[170] In England, women used to wear corsets that severely constricted their breathing and damaged vital internal organs, in order to achieve a visual effect of an exaggeratedly low Waist-to-Hip ratio.
People make judgments of physical attractiveness based on what they see, but also on what they know about the person. Specifically, perceptions of beauty are malleable such that information about the person's personality traits can influence one's assessment of another person's physical beauty. A 2007 study had participants first rate pictures for attractiveness. After doing distracting math problems, participants saw the pictures again, but with information about the person's personality. When participants learned that a person had positive personality characteristics (e.g., smart, funny, kind), that person was seen as more physically attractive.[171] Conversely, a person with negative personality characteristics (e.g., materialistic, rude, untrustworthy) was seen as less physically attractive. This was true for both females and males.
Physical attractiveness can have various effects. A survey conducted by London Guildhall University of 11,000 people showed that those who subjectively describe themselves as physically attractive earn more income than others who would describe themselves as less attractive.[172] People who described themselves as less attractive earned, on average, 13% less than those who described themselves as more attractive, while the penalty for being overweight was around 5%. It is important to note that other factors such as self-confidence may explain or influence these findings as they are based on self-reported attractiveness as opposed to any sort of objective criteria; however, as one's self-confidence and self-esteem are largely learned from how one is regarded by his/her peers while maturing, even these considerations would suggest a significant role for physical appearance. One writer speculated that "the distress created in women by the spread of unattainable ideals of female beauty" might possibly be linked to increasing incidence of depression.[173]
Many have asserted that certain advantages tend to come to those who are perceived as being more attractive, including the ability to get better jobs and promotions; receiving better treatment from authorities and the legal system; having more choices in romantic partners and, therefore, more power in relationships; and marrying into families with more money.[14][67][168][169][174] Men and women use physical attractiveness as a measure of how "good" another person is.[175] Discrimination against or prejudice towards others based on their appearance is sometimes referred to as lookism.
Some researchers conclude that little difference exists between men and women in terms of sexual behavior.[176][177] Symmetrical men and women have a tendency to begin to have sexual intercourse at an earlier age, to have more sexual partners, to engage in a wider variety of sexual activities, and to have more one-night stands. They are also prone to infidelity and are more likely to have open relationships.[34] Additionally, they have the most reproductive success. Therefore, their physical characteristics are most likely to be inherited by future generations.[178][179][180][181]
Concern for improving physical attractiveness has led many persons to consider alternatives such as cosmetic surgery. It has led scientists working with related disciplines such as computer imaging and mathematics to conduct research to suggest ways to surgically alter a face in terms of distances between facial features, to make it closer to an ideal face with "agreed-upon standards of attractiveness", by using algorithms to suggest an alternative which still resembles the current face.[12] One research study found that cosmetic surgery as a way to "boost earnings" was "not profitable in a monetary sense."[67]
See also
- Adornment
- Body proportions
- Body shape
- Erotic capital
- Female body shape
- Halo effect
- Human physical appearance
- Matching hypothesis
- Sexual attraction
- Sexual fetishes
- Sexual objectification
References
- Notes
- ^ "People: Just Deserts". Time Magazine. May 28, 1945. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,775696,00.html. Retrieved 2011-08-05. "... "the most perfect all-over beauty of all time." Runner-up: the Venus de Milo."
- ^ "SAYS VENUS DE MILO WAS NOT A FLAPPER; Osteopath Says She Was Neurasthenic, as Her Stomach WasNot is Proper Place.". The New York Times. April 29, 1922. http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F50B14F6355810738DDDA00A94DC405B828EF1D3. Retrieved 2011-08-05. "Venus de Milo ... That lady of renowned beauty..."
- ^ CBS News Staff (2011-08-05). "Venus". CBS News. http://www.cbsnews.com/2300-3445_162-5417565.html. Retrieved 2011-08-05. "The classical vision of beauty exemplified in Greek art, such as the 2nd century B.C. Venus de Milo (a.k.a. Aphrodite of Milos), was an ideal carried through millennia, laying the basis for much of Western art's depictions of the human form."
- ^ Kousser R (2005). "Creating the Past: The Vénus de Milo and the Hellenistic Reception of Classical Greece". American Journal of Archaeology 109 (2): 227–250. doi:10.3764/aja.109.2.227.
- ^ Dion K, Berscheid E, Walster E (December 1972). "What is beautiful is good". J Pers Soc Psychol 24 (3): 285–90. doi:10.1037/h0033731. PMID 4655540.
- ^ a b c Joanna Briscoe (17 January 2004). "Haven't I seen you somewhere before?". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2004/jan/17/weekend7.weekend2. Retrieved 2011-07-15. "Evolutionary psychologists claim there is an underlying standard script for beauty — a foundation for what we find appealing that transcends culture and ethnicity. There are various absolutes. For instance, to judge someone beautiful, the eye requires symmetry."
- ^ Daniel Nettle: Women’s height, reproductive success and the evolution of sexual dimorphism in modern humans. The Royal Society. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- ^ a b c Glassenberg AN, Feinberg DR, Jones BC, Little AC, Debruine LM (December 2010). "Sex-dimorphic face shape preference in heterosexual and homosexual men and women". Arch Sex Behav 39 (6): 1289–96. doi:10.1007/s10508-009-9559-6. PMID 19830539.
- ^ a b c Perrett, D.I.; Lee, K.J.; Penton-Voak, I.S.; Rowland, D.R.; Yoshikawa, S.; Burt, D.M.; Henzi, S.P.; Castles, D.L. et al. (1998). "Effects of sexual dimorphism on facial attractiveness". Nature 394 (6696): 884–7. doi:10.1038/29772. PMID 9732869. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v394/n6696/full/394884a0.html.
- ^ Lorenz, Kate. (2005). "Do Pretty People Earn More?" www.CNN.com.
- ^ Guy Dammann (20 August 2008). "Rules of attraction". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/aug/20/beauty. Retrieved 2011-07-15. "scientists from Brunel University have revealed that physical attraction is all down to bodily symmetry."
- ^ a b c SARAH KERSHAW (October 8, 2008). "The Sum of Your Facial Parts". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/09/fashion/09skin.html?pagewanted=all. Retrieved 2011-07-15.
- ^ a b DAVID J. BERRI (September 16, 2008). "Do Pretty-Boy Quarterbacks Make More Money?". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/14/sports/playmagazine/0914play-FBALL-QBS.html. Retrieved 2011-07-15. "Research, though, has indicated that what we think of as facial attractiveness is really just facial symmetry."
- ^ a b Edward Willett (October 29, 2008). "A person's face can say a lot: Helen's face is said to have launched a thousand ships, while Medusa's could turn men to stone. And even today we talk about individuals with "a face that can stop a clock."". The Leader-Post (Regina). http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderpost/news/arts_life/story.html?id=89cfe85e-664a-4abf-ba93-faed9fd7704b. Retrieved 2011-07-15. ""people preferentially mate with, date, associate with, employ, and even vote for physically attractive individuals." ... Symmetry is one trait we find attractive (but only if the face is right-side up: your symmetric face will, alas, do nothing to help you attract a mate if you constantly stand on your head."
- ^ a b Clare Murphy (4 December 2003). "In the eye of the beholder?". BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/3291271.stm. Retrieved 2011-07-15. "Art historians, anthropologists and human psychologists in general agree that it is the symmetry of a face, its perfect proportion, or indeed its averageness — where no feature stands out — that has consistently down the ages been deemed attractive. ..."
- ^ Oliver Burkeman (24 April 2010). "This column will change your life: The beauty in imperfection". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2010/apr/24/change-your-life-beauty-imperfection. Retrieved 2011-07-15. "Absolute flawlessness, it's long been observed, is disturbing. It offers no point of connection, and may help explain the "uncanny valley" effect, where almost-lifelike robots trigger revulsion in humans. ..."
- ^ a b S McKeen (February 10, 2006). "A beauty fix plumps up psyche and overall health". The Edmonton Journal. http://www.canada.com/story_print.html?id=80528414-59df-4167-b5fb-fca13919d345&sponsor=. Retrieved 2011-07-15. "Evolution taught us to lust after symmetry — a nicely balanced body and face — because asymmetry signals past illness or injury. We therefore define beauty quite elegantly, right down to the most ideal ratio of hips to breasts and upper lip to lower lip. Singh says one study showed that people were able to gauge beauty at a subliminal level, when shown pictures for a mere one-hundredth of a second. Another study showed babies prefer pretty faces."
- ^ Voon, C.P. The Crossroads of Race and Sexuality Date Selection Among Men in Internet “Personal” Ads. CUNY Graduate School.
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- ^ Penton-Voak IS, Perrett DI (January 2000). "Female preference for male faces changes cyclically: Further evidence". Evol Hum Behav 21 (1): 39–48. doi:10.1016/S1090-5138(99)00033-1. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1090513899000331.
- ^ Rhodes G (2006). "The evolutionary psychology of facial beauty". Annu Rev Psychol 57: 199–226. doi:10.1146/annurev.psych.57.102904.190208. PMID 16318594.
- ^ Fink B, Neave N, Seydel H (2007). "Male facial appearance signals physical strength to women". Am J Hum Biol. 19 (1): 82–7. doi:10.1002/ajhb.20583. PMID 17160983.
- ^ Rhodes G., Chan J., Zebrowitz L.A., Simmons L.W. (2003). "Does sexual dimorphism in human faces signal health?". Proc Biol Sci. 270 (Suppl 1): S93–5. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2003.0023. PMC 1698019. PMID 12952647. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=1698019.
- ^ Cellerino A (2003). "Psychobiology of facial attractiveness". J Endocrinol Invest 26 (3 Suppl): 45–8. PMID 12834020.
- ^ a b Little AC, Burt DM, Penton-Voak IS, Perrett DI (2001). "Self-perceived attractiveness influences human female preferences for sexual dimorphism and symmetry in male faces". Proc Biol Sci. 268 (1462): 39–44. doi:10.1098/rspb.2000.1327. PMC 1087598. PMID 12123296. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=1087598.
- ^ Gangestad SW, Thornhill R (July 2003). "Facial masculinity and fluctuating asymmetry". Evol Hum Behav 24 (4): 231–241. doi:10.1016/S1090-5138(03)00017-5. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1090513803000175.
- ^ http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0013585
- ^ DeBruine, L. M., Jones, B. C., Crawford, J. R., Welling, L. L. M. & Little, A. C. (2010). The health of a nation predicts their mate preferences: cross-cultural variation in women’s preferences for masculinized male faces. Proceedings of the Royal Society. B 277, 2405–2410. (doi:10.1098/rspb.2009.2184)
- ^ a b Stephen Khan and Roger Dobson (2 October 2005). "A symmetrical face isn't just prettier – it's healthier too". The Independent: Science (London). http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/a-symmetrical-face-isnt-just-prettier--its-healthier-too-509285.html. Retrieved 2010-01-19. "For the perfectly proportioned face is also an indication that the body it sits atop is well prepared to fight off infection. The common cold, asthma and flu are all more likely to be combated efficiently by those whose left side matches their right."
- ^ a b "Face shape clue to mental decline: Men with symmetrical faces are less likely to lose their memory and intelligence in later life, according to researchers.". BBC News. 9 August 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/edinburgh_and_east/8192193.stm. Retrieved 2011-07-15. "Psychologists at the University of Edinburgh found a link between facial symmetry and mental performance between the ages of 79 and 83. ..."
- ^ Tim Radford (17 August 2005). "How women dream of symmetrical men". The Guardian (London). http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2005/aug/17/genderissues.research. Retrieved 2010-01-19. "The research once again confirms a hypothesis that beauty is not merely in the eye of the beholder: it is an indicator of genetic fitness. From a choice of computer-generated faces, volunteers routinely choose the most symmetrical as the most attractive. Physical symmetry is interpreted as a sign of good inheritance. And therefore, the theory goes, women in a position to conceive would be more attracted to someone more likely to engender the healthiest offspring."
- ^ Thornhill R, Gangestad SW, Comer R (1995). "Human female orgasm and mate fluctuating asymmetry". Animal Behaviour 50 (6): 1601–15. doi:10.1016/0003-3472(95)80014-X. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/000334729580014X.
- ^ Little AC, Jones BC, Waitt C, et al. (2008). Reimchen, Thomas. ed. "Symmetry Is Related to Sexual Dimorphism in Faces: Data Across Culture and Species". PLoS ONE 3 (5): e2106. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0002106. PMC 2329856. PMID 18461131. http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002106.
- ^ a b Nancy Etcoff (2000). Survival of the Prettiest: The Science of Beauty. pp. 50–3, 185–7.
- ^ Haselton MG, Gangestad SW (April 2006). "Conditional expression of women's desires and men's mate guarding across the ovulatory cycle". Horm Behav 49 (4): 509–18. doi:10.1016/j.yhbeh.2005.10.006. PMID 16403409. http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0018-506X(05)00256-4.
- ^ Rikowski A, Grammer K (May 1999). "Human body odour, symmetry and attractiveness". Proc. Biol. Sci. 266 (1422): 869–74. doi:10.1098/rspb.1999.0717. PMC 1689917. PMID 10380676. http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=10380676.
- ^ Gangestad SW, Thornhill R (May 1998). "Menstrual cycle variation in women's preferences for the scent of symmetrical men". Proc. Biol. Sci. 265 (1399): 927–33. doi:10.1098/rspb.1998.0380. PMC 1689051. PMID 9633114. http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=9633114.
- ^ "The laws of sexual attraction". CNN. April 13, 2009. http://articles.cnn.com/2009-04-13/living/o.laws.of.sex.attraction_1_attraction-mhc-testosterone-levels?_s=PM:LIVING. Retrieved 2011-07-25. "... when women are ovulating, they produce copulins, a scent that attracts men...."
- ^ a b "Google Science Fair semi-finalist: I can taste your DNA". The Guardian. 2011-07-25. http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/punctuated-equilibrium/2011/may/11/2. Retrieved 2011-07-25. "the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) is a large gene family found in most vertebrates...."
- ^ a b Razib Khan in Genetics (August 16, 2008). "Taking the pill might make your brother hawt?". Discover Magazine. http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/gnxp/2008/08/taking-the-pill-might-make-your-brother-hawt/. Retrieved 2011-07-25. "Previous studies in animals and humans show that genes in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) influence individual odours and that females often prefer odour of MHC-dissimilar males, perhaps to increase offspring heterozygosity or reduce inbreeding. Women using oral hormonal contraceptives have been reported to have the opposite preference, raising the possibility that oral contraceptives alter female preference towards MHC similarity, with possible fertility costs."
- ^ Roberts SC, Little AC, Gosling LM, Perrett DI, Carter V, Jones BC, Penton-Voak I, Petrie M (May 2005). "MHC-heterozygosity and human facial attractiveness". Evol Hum Behav 26 (3): 213–226. doi:10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2004.09.002. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1090513804000789.
- ^ Penn DJ, Damjanovich K, Potts WK (August 2002). "MHC heterozygosity confers a selective advantage against multiple-strain infections". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99 (17): 11260–4. doi:10.1073/pnas.162006499. PMC 123244. PMID 12177415. http://www.pnas.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=12177415.
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- ^ Paley, Maggie (2000) [2000]. The Book of the Penis (first ed.). New York: Grove Press. pp. 232, 16–19. ISBN 0802116485.
- ^ Pierce, C.A. 1996; Cunningham, M.R. 1990; Pawlowski B, Dunbar RI, Lipowicz A 2000.
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- ^ Tall men 'top husband stakes'. BBC News. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
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- ^ Robins, A.H. (1991). Biological perspectives on human pigmentation. Cambridge University Press
- ^ a b see Steve Sailer, Blondes Have Deeper Roots (2005)
- ^ Bogin, B. (1999). Patterns of Human Growth. Cambridge University Press, NY.
- ^ a b c d e Buss, David (2003) [1994]. The Evolution of Desire (second ed.). New York: Basic Books. pp. 51–4. ISBN 0465077501.
- ^ Browne KR (2006). "Sex, Power, and Dominance: The Evolutionary Psychology of Sexual Harassment". Managerial and Decision Economics 27 (2–3): 145–158. doi:10.1002/mde.1289.
- ^ a b IAN TATTERSALL (book reviewer) Geoffrey Miller (author) (June 11, 2000). "Whatever Turns You On: A psychologist looks at sexual attraction and what it means for humankind.". The New York Times: Book Review. http://www.nytimes.com/books/00/06/11/reviews/000611.11tattert.html. Retrieved 2011-07-15. "it turns out that symmetry of bodily structure is a fitness indicator, and symmetry is more easily detectable among large breasts than small ones."
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- ^ a b c Fiona Macrae (27 December 2009). "Skin deep: Beautiful faces have Miss Average proportions". Daily Mail. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1236636/Skin-deep-Beautiful-faces-Miss-Average-proportions.html. Retrieved 2011-07-31. "All were head shots of the same person with different distances from eyes to mouth or between the eyes. She was at her most attractive when the space between her pupils was just under half, or 46 per cent, of the width of her face from ear to ear. The other perfect dimension was when the distance between her eyes and mouth was just over a third, or 36 per cent, of the overall length of her face from hairline to chin. ..."
- ^ a b Berscheid and Reis, 1998
- ^ Fink B, Penton-Voak IS (2002). "Evolutionary Psychology of Facial Attractiveness". Current Directions in Psychological Science 11 (5): 154–8. doi:10.1111/1467-8721.00190. http://cdp.sagepub.com/content/11/5/154.
- ^ Brizendine, Louann (2006). The female brain. Random House Digital, Inc.. pp. 63. ISBN 978-0-7679-2010-0. http://books.google.com/books?id=dGfQ2TMB1lIC&pg=PA63.
- ^ a b c d Sharon Jayson (March 31, 2011). "Study: Beautiful people cash in on their looks". USA Today. http://yourlife.usatoday.com/your-look/story/2011/03/Beautiful-people-are-happier-study-finds/45500558/1. Retrieved 2011-07-15. "Numerous studies, including his earlier research, have concluded that beauty helps the budget by providing greater wealth in several ways: Better-looking people generally earn more money and marry those who are better-looking and higher-earning, he says."
- ^ How Big Is Your Limbal Ring? | Psychology Today
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- ^ From Cunningham (1986) Research with Western subjects disclosed significant consistency in evaluating attractiveness (Hatfield & Sprecher, 1986; Iliife, 1960). The females judged to be most attractive may have such similar facial features that they were hard to distinguish one from another (Light, Hollander, & Kayra-Stuart, 1981). Cross-cultural investigations on the judgment of facial attractiveness tended to highlight societal differences, but rough agreements in facial aesthetic preferences were shown by Asian-American and Caucasian females (Wagatsuma & Kleinke, 1979), Chinese, Indian, and English females judging Greek males (Thakerar & Iwawaki, 1979), South African and American males and females (Morse, Gruzen, & Reis, 1976), and blacks and whites judging males and females from both races (Cross & Cross, 1971).
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- ^ Physical Attractiveness in Adaptationist Perspective in Evolutionary Psychology Handbook, Lawrence S. Sugiyama (2005).
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