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Rating
Attractiveness: Consensus among Women, not
Men
Newswise
— Hot or not? Men agree on the answer. Women
don’t.
There is much more consensus among men about
whom they find attractive than there is
among women, according to a new study by
Wake Forest University psychologist Dustin
Wood.
The study, co-authored by Claudia Brumbaugh
of Queens College, appears in the June issue
of the Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology.
“Men agree a lot more about who they find
attractive and unattractive than women agree
about who they find attractive and
unattractive,” says Wood, assistant
professor of psychology.
“This
study shows we can quantify the extent to
which men agree about which women are
attractive and vice versa.”
More than 4,000 participants in the study
rated photographs of men and women (ages
18-25) for attractiveness on a 10-point
scale ranging from “not at all” to “very.”
In exchange for their participation, raters
were told what characteristics they found
attractive compared with the average person.
The raters ranged in age from 18 to more
than 70.
Before the participants judged the
photographs for attractiveness, the members
of the research team rated the images for
how seductive, confident, thin, sensitive,
stylish, curvaceous (women), muscular (men),
traditional, masculine/feminine, classy,
well-groomed, or upbeat the people looked.
Breaking out these factors helped the
researchers figure out what common
characteristics appealed most to women and
men.
Men’s judgments of women’s attractiveness
were based primarily around physical
features and they rated highly those who
looked thin and seductive.
Most of the men in the study also rated
photographs of women who looked confident as
more attractive.
As a group, the women rating men showed some
preference for thin, muscular subjects, but
disagreed on how attractive many men in the
study were.
Some women gave high attractiveness ratings
to the men other women said were not
attractive at all.
“As far as we know, this is the first study
to investigate whether there are differences
in the level of consensus male and female
raters have in their attractiveness
judgments,” Wood says.
“These
differences have implications for the
different experiences and strategies that
could be expected for men and women in the
dating marketplace.”
For example, women may encounter less
competition from other women for the men
they find attractive, he says.
Men may need to invest more time and energy
in attracting and then guarding their mates
from other potential suitors, given that the
mates they judge attractive are likely to be
found attractive by many other men.
Wood says the study results have
implications for eating disorders and how
expectations regarding attractiveness affect
behavior.
“The study helps explain why women
experience stronger norms than men to obtain
or maintain certain physical
characteristics,” he says.
“Women who are trying to impress men are
likely to be found much more attractive if
they meet certain physical standards, and
much less if they don’t.
"Although
men are rated as more attractive by women
when they meet these physical appearance
standards too, their overall judged
attractiveness isn’t as tightly linked to
their physical features.”
The age of the participants also played a
role in attractiveness ratings. Older
participants were more likely to find people
attractive if they were smiling.
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