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) r...
<p>Data show the effects of low (-1SD) and high (+1SD) pathogen (A.), sexual (B.), and moral (C.) di...
Over the past decade, a small literature has tested how trait-level pathogen-avoidance motives (e.g....
AbstractPrevious research suggests that people who score higher on measures of pathogen disgust demo...
Women's preferences for men's androgen dependent secondary sexual traits are proposed to be phenotyp...
Women’s preferences for men’s androgen dependent secondary sexual traits are proposed to be phenotyp...
Recent studies suggest that pathogen-related factors may contribute to systematic variation in women...
Because women's preferences for male masculinity reflect tradeoffs between indirect benefits of grea...
Facial masculinity in men is thought to be an indicator of good health. Consistent with this idea, p...
The strength and direction of sexual selection via female choice on masculine facial traits in men i...
Recent studies suggest that individuals who are particularly concerned about infectious diseases sho...
Evolutionary approaches to human attractiveness have documented several traits that are proposed to ...
In many species, male secondary sexual traits have evolved via female choice as they confer indirect...
<p>Data show the effects of low (-1SD) and high (+1SD) pathogen (A.), sexual (B.), and moral (C.) di...
Over the past decade, a small literature has tested how trait-level pathogen-avoidance motives (e.g....
AbstractPrevious research suggests that people who score higher on measures of pathogen disgust demo...
Women's preferences for men's androgen dependent secondary sexual traits are proposed to be phenotyp...
Women’s preferences for men’s androgen dependent secondary sexual traits are proposed to be phenotyp...
Recent studies suggest that pathogen-related factors may contribute to systematic variation in women...
Because women's preferences for male masculinity reflect tradeoffs between indirect benefits of grea...
Facial masculinity in men is thought to be an indicator of good health. Consistent with this idea, p...
The strength and direction of sexual selection via female choice on masculine facial traits in men i...
Recent studies suggest that individuals who are particularly concerned about infectious diseases sho...
Evolutionary approaches to human attractiveness have documented several traits that are proposed to ...
In many species, male secondary sexual traits have evolved via female choice as they confer indirect...
<p>Data show the effects of low (-1SD) and high (+1SD) pathogen (A.), sexual (B.), and moral (C.) di...
Over the past decade, a small literature has tested how trait-level pathogen-avoidance motives (e.g....
AbstractPrevious research suggests that people who score higher on measures of pathogen disgust demo...