Abstract

Women’s preferences for men’s androgen dependent secondary sexual traits are proposed to be phenotypically plastic in response to exposure to pathogens and pathogen disgust. While previous studies report that masculinity in facial shape is more attractive to women who have recently been exposed to pathogenic cues and who are high in self-reported pathogen disgust, facial hair may reduce male attractiveness under conditions of high pathogens as beards are a possible breeding ground for disease carrying ectoparasites. In the present study, we test whether women’s preferences for beardedness and facial masculinity vary due to exposure to different pathogenic cues. Participants (N = 688, mean age + 1SD = 31.94 years, SD = 6.69, range = 18–67) rated the attractiveness of facial composite stimuli of men when they were clean-shaven or fully bearded. These stimuli were also manipulated in order to vary sexual dimorphism by ±50%. Ratings were conducted before and after exposure to one of four experimental treatments in which participants were primed to either high pathogens (e.g. infected cuts), ectoparasites (e.g. body lice), a mixture of pathogens and ectoparasites, or a control condition (e.g. innocuous liquids). Participants then completed the three-domain disgust scale measuring attitudes to moral, sexual and pathogen disgust. We predicted that women would prefer facial masculinity following exposure to pathogenic cues, but would show reduced preferences for facial hair following exposure to ectoparasites. Women preferred full beards over clean-shaven faces and masculinised over feminised faces. However, none of the experimental treatments influenced the direction of preferences for facial masculinity or beardedness. We also found no association between women’s self-reported pathogen disgust and their preferences for facial masculinity. However, there was a weak positive association between moral disgust scores and preferences for facial masculinity, which might reflect conservatism and preferences for gender typicality in faces. Women’s preferences for beards were positively associated with their pathogen disgust, which runs contrary to our predictions and may reflect preferences for high quality individuals who can withstand any costs of beardedness, although further replications are necessary before firm conclusions can be made. We conclude that there is little support for pathogenic exposure being a mechanism that underpins women’s directional preferences for masculine traits.

Highlights

  • Ecological conditions influence female capacity and motivation to choose mates, dramatically altering how sexual selection shapes the evolution of attractive traits [1,2]

  • We tested whether women adjust their preferences for facial masculinity and beardedness following exposure to pathogenic stimuli

  • Our findings join a growing literature that questions whether exposure to threat of disease influences women’s preferences for facial masculinity [31,32]

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Summary

Introduction

Ecological conditions influence female capacity and motivation to choose mates, dramatically altering how sexual selection shapes the evolution of attractive traits [1,2]. While a fitness advantage to females who select males with stronger past immunity is plausible, effect sizes are likely small in comparison to the advantages gained by selecting a male in good current condition [5]. This plasticity in mate preferences may contribute to the maintenance of variation in sexually attractive ornaments. Human cognition may have been shaped by natural selection to identify and avoid pathogenic stimuli [7] This behavioural immune system has been implicated in a host of human interpersonal behaviors [7,8], including mate preferences for individuals advertising disease resistance or genotypes that confer immunity from infection [9,10]. Facial masculinity may reliably indicate current condition and enhance attractiveness to women

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