Which physical characteristics make for attraction? If you perform a quick search for psychology articles (and blogs) on this topic, you will find innumerable accounts of studies telling you how, for example, people with high facial symmetry and particularly average faces are generally considered more beautiful, that women with low body-mass-indices and hourglass waist-hip-ratios are more attractive to men, and that women - in general - consider tall and dark to mean handsome. Many of these popular science reports evoke evolutionary psychology arguments as explanations of why modern humans supposedly respond to these attractiveness cues, but often times these reports fail to consider conflicting data realities as well as the many subtle limitations that are generally involved in research. The one over-generalization that I find too frequently proclaimed by many research reports concerns the so called "attractiveness-health link", a hypothesis which assumes that attributes that humans find attractive in the opposite sex are cues of increased health. Based on an excellent review of the scientific literature on attractiveness and health that appeared in the American Psychological Association's Psychological Bulletin in 2005, it is clear that a more nuanced interpretation of the attractiveness-health link is necessary:Although the "Good-Genes hypothesis" which posits that our perception of physical attractiveness has evolved to respond to cues of heritable health, makes -at first reading - for a compelling evolutionary story, only few studies to date have actually investigated the correlation of attributes that are considered attractive with improved health. Doing so, as you will read below, questions this story. What is even more, however, is that at closer investigation the supposed attractiveness-health link does not truly follow from evolutionary theory. After all, the currency of evolution is reproductive success, not health. For instance, we find that thin men who are relatively low in muscle mass, are healthier on average over a wide range of health measures, such as immune system efficiency, developmental health, or metabolic efficiency; healthier than muscular men with high body-mass indices, that is. But guess what: Muscular men are generally rated as more attractive, and - as some data suggests - also have more children on average than their skinny fellow men. Yet even with this finding the question remains whether these men's attractiveness is a cue of their increased fertility, or whether their reproductive success follows from their being attractive? Evolutionary arguments, we are reminded, are beautiful and powerful, but they require us to be careful in our analysis.
So what happens, if we investigate some of the more prominent attractiveness measures for their linkage to health. Some results for Western (!) developed (!!) countries are as follows:
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