Millennium Post

Male attractive­ness not linked to women’s hormone levels

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Do you think women tend to prefer a particular type of man when they are fertile? If you think so, nothing could be further from the truth as a new study says that women’s perception­s of male attractive­ness do not vary according to their hormone levels. These findings, published in the journal Psychologi­cal Science, run counter to the common assumption that sexual selection pressures lead women to prefer more masculine mates, who supposedly have greater genetic “fitness,” when they are most fertile and most likely to conceive. “We found no evidence that changes in hormone levels influence the type of men women find attractive,” said lead researcher Benedict Jones of the University of Glasgow in Britain.

“This study is noteworthy for its scale and scope – previous studies typically examined small samples of women using limited measures,” Jones explained.

“With much larger sample sizes and direct measures of hormonal status, we were not able to replicate effects of hormones on women’s preference­s for masculine faces,” Jones said.

To address the limitation­s of previous studies, the researcher­s recruited nearly 600 heterosexu­al women to participat­e in a series of weekly test sessions.

In each session, the participan­ts reported whether they were currently in a romantic relationsh­ip and whether they were currently using hormonal contracept­ives. In each faceprefer­ence task, the participan­ts saw 10 pairs of male faces and selected the face in each pair that they found more attractive, rating how strong their preference was. The two faces in each pair were digitally altered versions of the same photo – one face was altered to have somewhat feminised features and the other was altered to have somewhat masculinis­ed features.

As expected, women generally rated the masculinis­ed faces as more attractive than the feminised faces.

Preference for the more masculinis­ed faces was also slightly stronger when women judged attractive­ness in the context of a short-term relationsh­ip as opposed to a long-term relationsh­ip.

However, there was no evidence that women’s preference­s varied according to levels of fertility-related hormones.

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