A feminine-looking man's face is more likely than a
rugged-looking type to capture the eye of a heterosexual New
Zealand woman, new international research tends to suggest.
The global online study by Aberdeen University psychologist
Lisa DeBruine, and her husband, Ben Jones, found that women's
preferences for male faces vary according to the state of
health care in the nation where they live.
A small number of New Zealand women were among the 4500 they
tested in 30 countries.
Dr DeBruine said she started with the theory that the craggy
physical characteristics associated with masculinity in a
male face often indicated a strong immune system and a
likelihood of his producing healthier offspring than his
softer-featured men.
But the same sort of men were also more likely to be more
promiscuous and more likely to leave a woman to raise their
children alone.
Her study found that in environments where disease is rampant
and the child-mortality rate is high, women prefer masculine
men. In developed nations with better health care
effeminate-looking men were more competitive.
As health care improved, more masculine men fell out of
favour, Dr DeBruine said.
"Women from NZ, on average, preferred the more masculine face
38 percent of the time and the more feminine face 62 percent
of the time."
Only 26 NZ women were included in the study, with an average
age of 24 years, but Dr DeBruine said their choices supported
the evidence that improvements in health care in healthy
western countries mean women do not have to worry about so
much about the quality of their offspring - and so are
picking more feminine looking men than in earlier times.
Biological theories suggest that masculine traits in men
signal their genetic health, she said. Women historically
chose "manly" men because features such as a square jaw, low
brow and thin lips were linked to superior genes which would
produce stronger and healthier offspring.
But the theories also suggested that the more masculine the
man, the less likely he was to help out nurturing his child.
Now Dr DeBruine's team at Aberdeen University has found that
in Sweden, which had the best health care in her study, most
women (68 percent) preferred feminine-looking men.
In contrast in Brazil, which had the worst health care, the
majority of women (55 percent) preferred masculine men.
The 62 percent of New Zealand women who preferred
feminine-looking male faces was more than in Australia, where
that preference was held by 56 percent of women tested on
images of 20 different male faces.
The study subjects were white, heterosexual women aged
between 16 and 40.
Women were shown two images of the same face side by side,
but one picture was very subtly altered so it had more
masculine traits, such as a bigger jaw and heavier and lower
brow line, and the other was oppositely altered so it had
more feminine traits.
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.