Scientifically what makes a person attractive




















When images were manipulated in no other way than to make one side of a face more closely resemble the other side of the face, that dramatically increased the likelihood of that person being regarded as more attractive when compared to the unaltered image.

This may be related to the evolutionary drive to reproduce. In men, a symmetrical body correlates to increased sperm count and sperm health.

Breast symmetry in women is associated with increased fertility. This refers to the qualities that are associated with the way in which a face becomes more masculinized or feminized following puberty. Typically, masculine features such as a large jaw and a prominent brow ridge are associated with dominance and handsomeness. The same is true of things such as fuller lips and higher or fuller cheeks in women. Women with more feminized faces were found to have higher circulating estrogen, on average.

Features that give indication of health and vitality are prized and considered alluring. This includes things such as skin color. Not any particular color but homogeneity of color, as in evenness of skin tone.

This, along with smooth texture, fewer blemishes and lines are associated with health of facial skin. These qualities are felt to signify health even when someone is shown a patch of skin without a full face. Skin condition is a particularly useful marker of current health status. Redness of cheeks and lips may signal fitness and more oxygenated blood which explains the association between redness and attractiveness.

Women are seen as more attractive by men when presented with red backgrounds or when wearing red clothing relative to other colors.

A pale or sallow complexion, or a high waste to hip ratio in women are indicators of illness or a suboptimal metabolic picture and are perceived as less appealing. People were rated as more attractive when their features seemed to indicate socially valued traits such as kindness, contentedness or cheerfulness.

Although facial expressions are transient, faces shown smiling are almost always rated as more beautiful than neutral faces. Particularly when combined with direct eye contact or when the smile is perceived as directed at the person rating the picture. Earlier in the article, it was mentioned that masculine features were seen as more attractive.

That is more true for women who were already romantically partnered, who were around their time of ovulation when women are most fertile or in the context of short-term relationship seeking. During other phases of the menstrual cycle, a more feminized version of a male face is preferred. Instead of dominance, feminine traits are associated with honesty, warmth, and being cooperative.

Research shows that men labelled as married were more alluring than men labelled as single. Women also rate men as more enticing when they are shown as surrounded by other women than when they are shown alone or with other men. People also perceive someone as more attractive, in part, if their prior romantic partner had features associated with the standard of beauty.

An interesting quality that determines how fetching you will find someone is what you look like. Women seem to have an aversion to opposite-sex faces that looked like them. When men were looking at opposite-sex faces that had similar facial features to them, there was an aversion to those images, but only when asked to consider the partner for short-term relationships. March 1, Keep your chin up.

Consider wearing sunglasses. Boost your adrenaline levels. Think androgyny. The body spray, however, might… 5. Stop smiling or smile a lot. Consider your facial hair carefully. Stick with a group. Arch your back or work on your dad bod. Staff Writer. Must Read. Bonnie Pfiester -. Douglas -. Related Articles. Load More. Stay in Touch. Contact Us. All Rights Reserved. So females that live in one of these types of environments should prefer asymmetrical males, Morris explains.

Those males would carry the best genes for their environment, and would later pass them on to their young. Research on birds also shows that female birds prefer good-looking guys. For example, among satin bowerbirds, females prefer males whose feathers reflect more ultraviolet UV light. Researchers at Auburn University in Alabama caught male bowerbirds and took blood samples. Males with blood parasites had feathers reflecting less UV light than healthy males. They were using that information to find healthy males to father their young.

Adeline Loyau is a behavioral ecologist who has seen similar things in peacocks. These are the vivid circles at the ends of their tail feathers. She knew peahens prefer males with more eyespots.

They also prefer males that show off their tails more. Her work has now shown that healthier peacocks have more eyespots in their tails. These birds also splay their flashy tails more frequently to the females.

Loyau then gave some males an injection that made their immune systems leap into action. It was as if they were sick. These peacocks displayed their tails less than the healthy guys did. But that was only true if they had fewer eyespots. Females are better off avoiding sick mates, she explains. A female bird, she adds, also looks for good genes in the guy who will father her young. For example, it may help us find healthy mates.

Langlois and her team in Texas studied this question using a technique called EEG. EEGs measure electrical activity in the brain using a net of small electrodes placed on the outside of the head. The scientists recruited college students for their brain study. Each student looked at a series of faces while wearing the electrode net.

Human faces fell into one of three groups: highly attractive, unattractive or digitally morphed images that combined many features into an average face. Some chimpanzee faces were put in the mix too. The EEG recorded brain activity as each student viewed the pictures. The researchers then searched the EEGs for patterns of electrical activity. Those patterns offered signs of what the brain was doing. That makes sense, the researchers now say, because people are more familiar with human faces.

The team also found that brains processed very attractive faces faster than unattractive ones. And they processed average faces even faster. Subjects also rated the averaged faces as most attractive.

In sum, looks may go far more than skin deep after all. They also can affect how people interact. Sure, love is mysterious, but, in some ways, attraction is not. Science actually has an explanation for why we are attracted to certain people and why we don't give others the time of day. INSIDER spoke to several experts to find out what it is that draws us towards certain people in terms of our biological makeup.

It's worth noting that much of the research about attraction tends to focus on heterosexual relationships, but obviously that's not the limit of attraction or love. Have you ever noticed that it's not uncommon to see co-stars from your favorite series or movie dating in real life? Rachel McAdams and Ryan Gosling, for instance, dated on and off for three years off screen after starring together in "The Notebook.

Why does this seem to be a pattern? This is backed up by 50 years worth of scientific research that has found that proximity is one of the most powerful indicators of attraction.

We simply are drawn to the people we see frequently, which explains why celebrity co-stars end up getting together due to how closely they work with one another on a regular basis. Whether we realize it or not, we are biologically attracted to people who look healthy and who look like they can reproduce. This can explain why you see photos of women in the s wearing bustles to overemphasize their healthy, childbearing hips in order to attract men.

Additionly, research suggests that people are also attracted to those who look healthy.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000