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Men prioritize hip information when judging female attractiveness, using it to calculate key health indicators like waist-to-hip ratio and body mass index for mate selection.

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Area of Science:

  • Evolutionary Psychology
  • Visual Neuroscience
  • Human Mate Selection

Background:

  • Female physical attractiveness is a critical factor in mate selection, influenced by various bodily features.
  • Previous eye movement studies suggest males sample broad body regions (face, breasts, midriff) for attractiveness judgments.
  • The specific visual information utilized, especially extra-foveal information, remains largely unknown in natural viewing conditions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the visual information men use when assessing female body attractiveness.
  • To determine the role of extra-foveal vision and specific body regions in attractiveness judgments.
  • To elucidate the visual processing hierarchy involved in evaluating female physical attractiveness.

Main Methods:

  • Employed a gaze-contingent paradigm to control visual information availability during attractiveness ratings.
  • Presented male participants with front- and back-view images of female bodies.
  • Manipulated visual access to body parts using restricted apertures to analyze fixation patterns.

Main Results:

  • Men utilize extra-foveal visual information when available during attractiveness assessments.
  • Under restricted viewing conditions, fixations shifted significantly towards the hips, followed by breasts and face.
  • Hip region information appears crucial for calculating waist-to-hip ratio and body mass index.

Conclusions:

  • The visual system prioritizes hip information (width and curvature) for evaluating female attractiveness.
  • Hip measurements are essential for computing the waist-to-hip ratio and body mass index, key mate selection indicators.
  • This study reveals a hierarchical visual strategy for assessing female attractiveness, emphasizing the importance of hip morphology.