Research indicates that heterosexual men tend to be attracted to young and beautiful women with bodily symmetry. Rather than decreasing it, modernity has only increased the emphasis men place on women's looks.
Evolutionary psychologists attribute such attraction to an evaluation of the
fertility potential in a prospective mate.
Facial features General study found that the facial proportions of
Jessica Alba were close to the
average of all female profiles. inspired the small-face fad in Japan which caused Japanese women to buy beauty products such as masks and creams to try to obtain a small face like hers. complexion wafers decried blotches, moles, pimples, freckles, and "all female irregularities". Arsenic was known to be poisonous during the
Victorian era. Research has attempted to determine which facial features communicate attractiveness.
Facial symmetry has been shown to be considered attractive in women, and some men have been found to prefer full lips, high forehead, broad face, small chin, small nose, short and narrow jaw, high cheekbones, clear and smooth skin, and wide-set eyes. The shape of the face in terms of "how everything hangs together" is an important determinant of beauty. Women with thick, dark
limbal rings in their eyes have also been found to be more attractive. The explanation given is that because the ring tends to fade with age and medical problems, a prominent limbal ring gives an honest indicator of youth. In Persian literature, beautiful women are said to have noses like
hazelnuts. In Arabian society in the Middle Ages, a component of the female beauty ideal was for women to have straight and fine noses.In Jewish
Rabbinic literature, the rabbis considered a delicate nose to be the ideal type of nose for women. In Japan, during the
Edo period, a component of the female beauty ideal was for women to have tall noses which were straight and not "too tall". In a cross-cultural study, more
neotenised (i.e., youthful looking) female faces were found to be most attractive to men while less neotenized female faces were found to be less attractive to men, regardless of the females' actual age. In a study of Italian women who have won beauty competitions, it was found that their faces had more "babyish" (
pedomorphic) traits than those of the "normal" women used as a reference. In a cross-cultural study, Marcinkowska et al. said that 18-to-45-year-old heterosexual men in all 28 countries surveyed preferred photographs of 18-to-24-year-old white women whose faces were feminised using facial image editing software over faces of 18-to-24-year-old white women that were masculinised using that software, but there were differences in preferences for femininity across countries. The higher the National Health Index (based on eight national health statistics taken from the World Health Organization Statistical Information Service using data from 2002 to 2006) of a country, the more were the feminised faces preferred over the masculinised faces. Among the countries surveyed, Japan had the highest femininity preference and Nepal had the lowest femininity preference. Michael R. Cunningham of the Department of Psychology at the
University of Louisville found, using a panel of
East Asian,
Hispanic and
White judges, that the female faces tended to be judged as more attractive if they had a mixture of youthful and sexually mature features. Using a panel of
African Americans and Whites as judges, Cunningham found more neotenous faces were perceived as having both higher "femininity" and "sociability". The authors found no evidence of ethnocentric bias in the Asian or White samples, as Asians and Whites did not differ significantly in preference for neonate cues, and positive ratings of White women did not increase with exposure to
Western media. Rather than finding evidence for purely "neonate" faces being most appealing, Cunningham found faces with "sexually-mature" features at the "periphery" of the face combined with "neonate" features in the "centre of the face" most appealing in women. Upon analyzing the results of his study, Cunningham concluded that preference for "neonate features may display the least cross-cultural variability" in terms of "attractiveness ratings" and, in another study, Cunningham concluded that there exists a large agreement on the characteristics of an attractive face. In computer face averaging tests, women with
averaged faces have been shown to be considered more attractive. On average, symmetrical features are one ideal, while unusual, stand-out features are another. A study performed by the University of Toronto found that the most attractive facial dimensions were those found in the average female face. However, that particular University of Toronto study looked only at white women. A 2011 study, by Wilkins, Chan and Kaiser found correlations between perceived femininity and attractiveness; that is, women's faces which were seen as more feminine were judged by both men and women to be more attractive. The study also found that
East Asian women's faces were more "prototypically" feminine than White women's, a finding that was replicated by several follow-up studies which found that this explains the higher attractiveness ratings of East Asian women compared to White women. Similarly, in Arabian society in the Middle Ages, a component of the female beauty ideal was for women to have round faces which were like a "full moon". In Japan, during the
Edo period, a component of the female beauty ideal was for women to have oval-shaped faces. In Jewish
Rabbinic literature, the rabbis considered full lips to be the ideal type of lips for women. A study that used Chinese, Malay and Indian judges said that Chinese women and Chinese men with retrusive mandibles (where the mouth is flat and in-line with the rest of the face) were judged to be the most attractive and Chinese men and Chinese women with a protruding mandible (where the jaw projects outward) were judged to be the least attractive. Classical Persian literature, paintings and miniatures portrayed traits such as long black curly hair, a small mouth, long arched eyebrows, large almond-shaped eyes, a small nose, and beauty spots as being beautiful for women.
Eyes A study that investigated whether or not an eyelid crease makes Chinese-descent women more attractive using
photo-manipulated photographs of young Chinese-descent women's eyes found that the "medium upper
eyelid crease" was considered most attractive by all three groups of both sexes: white people,
Chinese and
Taiwanese nationals together as a group, and
Taiwanese and
Chinese Americans together as a group. Similarly, all three groups of both genders found the absence of an eye crease to be least attractive on Chinese women. In the late sixteenth century, Japanese people considered
epicanthic folds to be beautiful. A study that used Russian, American, Brazilian,
Aché, and
Hiwi raters, found that the only strong distinguisher between men and women's faces was wider eyes relative to facial height for women, and this trait consistently predicted attractiveness ratings for women. In Arabian society in the Middle Ages, a component of the female beauty ideal was for women to have dark black eyes which are large and long and in the shape of almonds. Furthermore, the eyes should be lustrous, and they should have long eyelashes. A source written in 1823, said that a component of the Persian female beauty ideal was for women to have large eyes which are black in colour. A study of British undergraduates found men preferred small breasts on women. Smaller breasts were widely associated with youthfulness. Cross-culturally, another study found significant variability regarding the ideal breast size. The pigmentation of nipples and breasts appears to be the most important quality of breast attractiveness. Men rated women with dark nipples and dark areola as significantly more attractive than those with light-coloured nipples or areola. Breasts of medium cup size were found to be the most attractive, however it was noted that men focused primarily on the colouration of nipples and areola rather than breast size. Greater breast ptosis (more sagging breasts) is perceived as less attractive and attributed to a woman of older age. These findings are consistent with previous research that link breast attractiveness with female youthfulness. Unlike breast size, breast ptosis seems to be a universal marker of female breast attractiveness. A study showed that men prefer symmetrical breasts. Breast symmetry may be particularly sensitive to developmental disturbances and the symmetry differences for breasts are large compared to other body parts. Women who have more symmetrical breasts tend to have more children. Historical literature often includes specific features of individuals or a gender that are considered desirable. These have often become a matter of convention, and should be interpreted with caution. In Arabian society in the Middle Ages, a component of the female beauty ideal was for women to have small breasts. In Persian literature, beautiful women are said to have breasts like
pomegranates or lemons. In the Chinese text
Jeweled Chamber Secrets () from the
Six Dynasties period, the ideal woman was described as having firm breasts. In
Sanskrit literature, beautiful women are often said to have breasts so large that they cause the women to bend a little bit from their weight. In
Middle English literature, beautiful women should have small breasts that are round like an apple or a pear.
Buttocks Biological anthropologist
Helen E. Fisher of the centre for Human Evolution Studies in the Department of Anthropology of
Rutgers University said that, "perhaps, the fleshy, rounded
buttocks... attracted males during
rear-entry intercourse." In a recent study, using 3D models and eye-tracking technology Fisher's claim was tested and it was shown that the slight thrusting out of a woman's back influences how attractive others perceive her to be and captures the gaze of both men and women. Bobbi S. Low et al. of the School of Natural Resources and Environment at the
University of Michigan, said the female "buttocks evolved in the context of females competing for the attention and parental commitment of powerful resource-controlling males" as an "honest display of fat reserves" that could not be confused with another type of tissue, In a 1995 study, black men were more likely than white men to use the words "big" or "large" to describe their conception of an attractive woman's posterior. In a 2009 experiment to research what South African, British white and British African men considered to be the most attractive size of posterior and breasts for white and black women. This image shown here only shows the two extreme variations of size on black female figures used in the experiment. The left-hand figure received the highest average attractiveness rating from South African men while a figure with an intermediate size received the highest ratings from both white and black British men. The right-hand figure did not receive the highest average attractiveness rating from any group.
Body mass Body Mass Index (BMI) is an important determinant to the perception of beauty. Even though the Western ideal is for a thin woman, some cultures prefer plumper women, which has been argued to support that attraction for a particular BMI merely is a cultural artifact. The attraction for a proportionate body also influences an appeal for
erect posture. One cross-cultural survey comparing body-mass preferences among 300 of the most thoroughly studied cultures in the world showed that 81% of cultures preferred a female body size that in English would be described as "plump". Availability of food influences which female body size is attractive which may have evolutionary reasons. Societies with food scarcities prefer larger female body size than societies that have plenty of food. In Western society, males who are hungry prefer a larger female body size than they do when not hungry. BMI has been criticised for conflating fat and muscle, and more recent studies have concentrated on body composition. Among Australian university students, the most attractive body composition for women (10.31 kg fat, 42.45 kg muscle) was found to be lower in fat than both the most healthy appearing composition, and below the healthy range. Popenoe writes that societies with abundant food sources often value thin women, while those with food scarcity value women with fat bodies. In the West, women with thin bodies became the ideal in the 19th century, as the fat body became associated with criminality and backwardness. Some implicated the fashion industry for the promulgation of the notion of thinness as attractive. East Asians have historically preferred women whose bodies had small features. For example, during the
Spring and Autumn period of Chinese history, women in Chinese harems wanted to have a thin body in order to be attractive for the Chinese emperor. Later, during the
Tang dynasty, a less thin body type was seen as most attractive for Chinese women. In Arabian society in the Middle Ages, a component of the female beauty ideal was for women to be slender like a "cane" or a "twig". In the Chinese text
Jeweled Chamber Secrets () from the
Six Dynasties period, the ideal woman was described as not being "large-boned". In the
Victorian era, women who adhered to Victorian ideals were expected to limit their food consumption to attain the ideal slim figure.
Waist–hip ratio A WHR of 0.7 for women has been shown to correlate strongly with general
health and
fertility. Women within the 0.7 range have optimal levels of
estrogen and are less susceptible to major diseases such as
diabetes, heart disease, and ovarian cancers. Women with high WHR (0.80 or higher) have significantly lower pregnancy rates than women with lower WHRs (0.70–0.79), independent of their BMIs. Female waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) has been proposed by evolutionary psychologists to be an important component of human male
mate choice, because this trait is thought to provide a reliable cue to a woman's reproductive value. Both men and women judge women with smaller waist-to-hip ratios more attractive. Ethnic groups vary with regard to their ideal waist-to-hip ratio for women, ranging from 0.6 in China, to 0.8 or 0.9 in parts of South America and Africa, and divergent preferences based on ethnicity, rather than nationality, have also been noted. A study found the
Machiguenga people, an isolated indigenous South American ethnic group, prefer women with high WHR (0.9). The preference for heavier women, has been interpreted to belong to societies where there is no risk of obesity. In Chinese, the phrase "willow waist" () is used to denote a beautiful woman by describing her waist as being slender like a willow branch. In the
Victorian era, a small waist was considered the main trait of a beautiful woman. The term "
wasp waist" describes an extreme fashion silhouette, produced by a style of corset and girdle.
Feet size According to some studies, most men prefer women with small feet, such as in ancient China where
foot binding was practiced. In Jewish
Rabbinic literature, the rabbis considered small feet to be the ideal type of feet for women. One
evolutionary psychology hypothesis suggests hair condition may function as a cue to health and nutritional status, since deficiencies in vitamins and minerals can affect hair quality and growth. Because hair grows slowly, its condition may reflect aspects of longer-term health. Across many cultures, healthy, shiny hair is often associated with attractiveness. A component of the female beauty ideal in
Persian literature is for women to have black hair, which was also preferred in Arabian society in the Middle Ages. In Middle English literature, curly hair is a necessary component of a beautiful woman.
Fertility-driven attractiveness There are some subtle changes in women's perceived attractiveness across the
menstrual cycle. During their most
fertile phase, there are observable changes in women's behaviour and physiology. A study conducted by G. Miller (2007) examined the amount of tip earnings by lap dancers across the menstrual cycle. He found that dancers received nearly US$15 more when they were near
ovulation than during the rest of the month. This suggests that women either are more attractive during ovulation phase, or they experience a significant change in their behaviour. Some other studies have found that there are subtle differences in women's faces when in their
fertile phase. Bobst and Lobmaier (2012) created 20 prototyped photographs, some of a female during ovulation and some during the
luteal phase. Men were asked to choose the more attractive, the more caring and the more flirtatious faces. They found a significant preference for the
follicular phase (ovulation). This suggests that subtle shape differences in faces occurring during the female's
ovulation phase are sufficient to attract men more. This idea is supported by another study, where a similar experiment was done. Men and women had to judge photographs of women's faces taken during their
fertile phase. They were all rated more attractive than during
non-fertile phase. There are some subtle visible cues to ovulation in women's faces, and they are perceived as more attractive, leading to the idea that it could be an adaptive mechanism to raise a female's mate value at that specific time (when probability of conception is at its highest). Women's attractiveness, as perceived by men and women, slightly differs across her menstrual cycle, being at peak when a woman is in her ovulation phase. Jones et al. (2008), focused on women's preferences for
masculinity, apparent health and self-resemblance and found that it varies across the cycle. They explained that the function of the effects of menstrual cycle phase on preferences for apparent health and self-resemblance in faces is to increase the likelihood of
pregnancy. Similarly, women prefer the scent of
symmetrically faced men and men with masculine faces during fertile phases as well as stereotypical male displays such as social presence, and direct
intrasexual competitiveness. During the
follicular phase (fertile), women prefer more masculine traits (
testosterone dependent traits such as face shape) than when in non-fertile phase. Those findings have been found in the voice, showing that females' preferences for more masculine voices over feminine voices increase during the fertile phase of the menstrual cycle. But not only do females' preferences vary across cycle, their behaviours can vary as well. Effectively, men respond differently to women when they are on ovulatory cycle, because women act differently. Women in the ovulatory phase are flirtier with men showing
genetic fitness markers than in low fertile phase. It has been shown in some studies that women high in
estrogen are generally perceived to be more attractive than women with low levels of estrogen, based on women not wearing make-up. High estrogen level women may also be viewed as healthier or to have a more
feminine face. Similarly, a study investigated the capacity of women to select high quality males based on their facial attractiveness. They found that facial attractiveness correlated with
semen quality (good, normal, or bad depending on
sperm morphology and motility). The more attractive a man's face is, linked to his sperm being of better quality.
Sexual ornamentation Sexual ornaments are seen in many organisms; in humans, females have sexual ornamentation in the form of breasts and buttocks. The physical attraction to sexual ornaments is associated with
gynoid fat, as opposed to
android fat, which is considered unattractive. In human females, proximate causes of the development of sexual ornaments are associated with the predominance of estrogen in puberty. The activation of
estrogen receptors around the female skeletal tissue causes gynoid fat to be deposited in the breasts, buttocks, hips and thighs, producing an overall typical female body shape. Specifically, female breasts are considered more attractive when symmetrical, rather than asymmetrical, as this is thought to reflect good
developmental stability. Sexual ornaments are considered attractive features as they are thought to indicate high mate value, fertility, and the ability to provide good care to offspring. They are
sexually selected traits present for the purpose of
honest signalling and capturing the visual attention of the opposite sex, most commonly associated with women capturing the visual attention of men. It has been proposed that these ornaments have evolved in order to advertise personal quality and
reproductive value. Honest signalling with sexual ornaments is associated with ultimate causation of these evolved traits. The evolution of these ornaments is also associated with female-female competition in order to gain material benefits provided by resourceful and high status males. In humans, once these sexual ornaments develop, they are permanent. It is thought that this is associated with the long-term pair bonding humans engage in; human females engage in extended sexual activity outside of their fertile period. This relates to another ultimate cause of sexual ornaments with function in obtaining non-genetic material benefits from males. In other animal species, even other primate species, these advertisements of reproductive value are not permanent. Usually, it is the point at which the female is at her most fertile, she displays
sexual swellings.
Adolescence is the period of time whereby humans experience
puberty, and experience anatomical changes to their bodies through the increase of sex hormones released in the body. Adolescent exaggeration is the period of time at which sexual ornaments are maximised, and peak gynoid fat content is reached. In human females, the mean age for this is approximately 16 years. Female breasts develop at this stage not only to prepare for reproduction, but also due to competition with other females in displaying their reproductive value and quality to males. ==Neural correlates of perceiving attractiveness==