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Wednesday, 22 September 2010 13:36

Are Men More Interested In A Woman's Body or Her Face?

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Men Looking For A Long Term Relationship Look For Beautiful Faces Men Looking For A Long Term Relationship Look For Beautiful Faces Photo by Izzard http://www.flickr.com/photos/izzard/146508039
If you are studying Relationships this year, you may be interested in some new research by David Buss and graduate students Jaime Confer and Carin Perilloux. Their study found that men looking for short term "companionship" are more interested in her body than her face; however, men looking for long term relationships are more focused on a woman's face.

A woman's body generally provides cues about her state of fertility while her face gives insight into her long-term reproductive value, according to previous research. So the new findings suggest men seeking a short-term relationship have psychological adaptations to look for partners who are fertile and can produce offspring.

"Men's priorities shift depending on what they want in a mate, with facial features taking on more importance when a long-term relationship is the goal," says Jaime Confer

"Mating is central to the engine of natural selection. This research helps clarify people's preference."

Women showed no significant difference in their interest in faces or bodies when looking for short-term or long-term mates, according to the study published this month in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior.

Previous research has examined the qualities that make faces and bodies attractive, such as symmetry and waist-to-hip ratio. But this is the first study to experimentally analyze the relative importance of faces and bodies as whole components.

As part of the study, 375 college students were shown an image of another person, whose face and body was hidden, who was described as either a potential short-term or long-term mate. The participants had the option of looking at either head or body, but not both.

Twenty-five percent of men who were told to consider the mate as a long-term partner looked at their potential partner's body. In contrast, 51 percent of those who were told to consider her as a short-term partner chose to look her body.

Confer and her colleagues are considering follow-up research in which participants will be asked if they want to see the faces or bodies of potential rivals who may be stealing their mates. That could help reveal if men and women feel more threatened by a pretty face or a good body.

Source: Newswise (Press Release)


Last modified on Wednesday, 22 September 2010 13:50

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Keiron Walsh

Keiron Walsh

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