The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Heavier women ‘ease the pain’

Men under stress prefer larger ladies, according to new research

- CRAIG SMITH csmith@thecourier.co.uk

When the going gets tough, men prefer heavier women.

That’s according to a new study by St Andrews University which is the first to find that attraction to faces changes with environmen­tal factors.

The research compared men whose environmen­t was normal with male cadets in the University Officer Training Corps being put through 10 days of intensive training at an army camp.

Face preference­s were found to change depending on the environmen­t being experience­d, with heavier-looking women being preferred by the men suddenly being exposed to the harsh army training camp environmen­t.

The research was carried out by psychologi­sts Dr Carlota Batres and Professor David Perrett at the university’s Perception Lab.

Dr Batres, who led the research, said: “Our findings provide new evidence for the malleabili­ty of preference­s depending on the environmen­t.

“We found that the weight preference­s in prospectiv­e female partners changed in response to the harsher environmen­t and then remained at the new level while the environmen­t remained harsh.”

During the tests, all participan­ts were asked to choose the faces they considered the most attractive. Faces were computer-generated and varied in apparent weight.

Each subject was asked to rate faces three separate times with time intervals of approximat­ely three days between each testing session.

For the control subjects – whose lives and environmen­t did not change compared to baseline – there were no changes at all in their preference­s across the testing sessions.

For the army cadets, however, preference increased towards heavier looking women between the first day of the camp before the training commenced and day three of training.

Preference then plateaued for the remainder of the training camp.

During training, cadets reported higher levels of stress, physical strain, mental pressure, pain and being more out of their comfort zone after the first testing session.

Prof Perrett, who runs the Perception Lab at the university’s School of Psychology and Neuroscien­ce, added: “Previous studies have found that population­s living in places where life is tough prefer heavier women, but no one has shown that as the environmen­t changes, people’s preference­s change too.

“So it appears that when the going gets tough, tougher-looking women become more attractive.”

The paper, ‘How the harsh environmen­t of an army training camp changes human (Homo sapiens’) facial preference­s’, is published by the journal Ethology.

 ??  ?? The St Andrews University study claims that men’s attraction to faces changes with environmen­tal factors, including being exposed to harsh and stressful conditions.
The St Andrews University study claims that men’s attraction to faces changes with environmen­tal factors, including being exposed to harsh and stressful conditions.

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