Abstract
Recent studies reveal that violence significantly contributes to explaining individual’s facial preferences. Women who feel at higher risk of violence prefer less-masculine male faces. Given the importance of violence, we explore its influence on people’s preferences for a different physical trait. Masculinity correlates positively with male strength and weight or body mass index (BMI). In fact, masculinity and BMI tend to load on the same component of trait perception. Therefore we predicted that individuals’ perceptions of danger from violence will relate to preferences for facial cues to low-BMI. In two studies in Colombia, men and women from Bogota, Medellin, and surrounding communities were shown pairs of faces transformed to epitomize the shape correlates of men with high or low-BMI. The images were of European, Salvadoran, or Colombian men. Participants were asked to choose the face they considered most attractive. Subsequently, participants answered a survey about their health (e.g., frequency of illnesses the past year), media access (e.g., frequency of Internet use), education level (e.g., graduating from high school), and experiences/perceptions of violence in study 1 and about specific types of violence (public and domestic) in study 2. Results from both studies showed that women who experienced/perceived higher levels of violence preferred faces of low-BMI Salvadoran men. Preferences for low-BMI facial cues were significantly explained by violence (public or domestic), even after controlling for all other variables (including age, education, health, and media access). These results may reflect women’s strategy to avoid male partners capable of inflicting harm.
Highlights
Recent studies reveal that violence significantly contributes to explaining individual’s facial preferences
Preferences for High-body mass index (BMI) Males A repeated-measures, within-subjects ANCOVA was conducted with preferences for facial cues of high-BMI males as the dependent variable, ethnicity (European vs. Salvadoran) as a within-subject factor, and participant’s sex and having children as between-subject factors
Including relationships status in the model did not contribute to explaining variance in the preferences for cues to BMI in male faces; since all significant effects and their directions were the same when this variable was included in the model, it was excluded from any subsequent statistical analysis
Summary
Recent studies reveal that violence significantly contributes to explaining individual’s facial preferences. Participants answered a survey about their health (e.g., frequency of illnesses the past year), media access (e.g., frequency of Internet use), education level (e.g., graduating from high school), and experiences/perceptions of violence in study 1 and about specific types of violence (public and domestic) in study 2 Results from both studies showed that women who experienced/perceived higher levels of violence preferred faces of low-BMI Salvadoran men. Preferences for low-BMI facial cues were significantly explained by violence (public or domestic), even after controlling for all other variables (including age, education, health, and media access) These results may reflect women’s strategy to avoid male partners capable of inflicting harm. Colombian women preferred less-masculine male faces when they had higher perceptions of men being dangerous to their children (Borras-Guevara et al 2017a) and when they were concerned about domestic violence (Borras-Guevara et al 2017b)
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