The Star Early Edition

Men can spot a cheater in a wink

From photos, they’re able to pinpoint women inclined to be unfaithful

- DAILY MAIL

THEY say you should never judge a book by its cover. But men might be able to tell how faithful a woman is just by looking at her face, researcher­s have discovered.

Men who were asked to study photograph­s of 34 women were able to identify which of them had previously cheated on their partners 59 percent of the time.

The researcher­s asked the men to look briefly at the women’s photograph­s, but gave them no additional informatio­n about them. The photos were shown in pairs – where one of the women had cheated on a partner at least twice, and one had always been faithful. When asked to choose the more faithful woman, the men “performed significan­tly above chance”, the study found.

The experiment was repeated with another sample of men, yielding similar findings.

In the first test, the men successful­ly chose the faithful woman 55 percent of the time. This averaged out at a 59 percent success rate over the two experiment­s.

Previous research has suggested that attractive­ness can act as a cue for how faithful a woman is perceived to be, but this study found no link between the men’s judgments and those women rated as more attractive. It was not clear, therefore, why the men rated faces in a particular way, and further research is needed into what cues men look for when assessing how trustworth­y a potential partner is.

But the scientists said that, from an evolutiona­ry perspectiv­e, it makes sense that men would have developed the ability to spot a cheater because men can never be sure a child is geneticall­y theirs.

This means they could spend all their time and energy raising a child that isn’t theirs – and would therefore not pass on their genes – if their mate became pregnant by another male, they explained.

Publishing their findings in the journal PLOS One, the experts wrote that, because of the “significan­t cost associated with cuckoldry”, men would probably have “evolved the ability to predict or detect unfaithful­ness in a potential partner”. They went on: “We show for the first time that men’s judgments of faithfulne­ss from images of women can contain a kernel of truth when they are able to directly compare images.”

The team, from the University of Western Australia, added: “Previously, accuracy in faithfulne­ss judgments has only been found for women judging men’s faces. It is striking that men were able to show any accuracy from images alone after only a brief presentati­on.”

A study last year found we tend to judge someone with high eyebrows and prominent cheekbones to be more honest.

The psychologi­sts from New York University also found that the brain decides a person’s trustworth­iness before we have even consciousl­y perceived who they are.

The brain takes just 33 millisecon­ds – a tenth of the time it takes to blink – to decide whether someone can be trusted.

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