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AC Little, TK Saxton, SC Roberts, BC Jones, LM DeBruine, J Vukovic, DI Perrett, DR Feinberg & T Chenore (in press). Women's
preferences for masculinity in male faces are highest during
reproductive age-range and lower around puberty and post-menopause. Psychoneuroendocrinology.
Masculinity in male faces is thought to be a sign of mate quality and
is associated with measures of long-term health. Previous studies have
demonstrated that women's masculinity preferences change across the
menstrual cycle with women preferring more masculine men during phases
of the menstrual cycle where fertility is highest (i.e. the late
follicular phase). Given the hormonal correlates of such preferences
and that these hormones change across the life span, we tested for
differences in female masculinity preferences at different ages. We
compared the masculinity preferences of peri-pubescent girls and young
adult women (Study 1), circum-menopausal women reporting to either be
pre- or post-menopause (Study 2), and a large sample of women across a
wide range of ages (Study 3). In all three studies, preferences for
masculinity in male faces were highest in women who were at a
reproductively active age. Preferences for masculinity were lower when
females were peri-pubescent, post-menopausal, or at ages corresponding
to these groups. These data support the notion that masculinity in male
faces is an important trait for reproductively relevant mate choice
decisions. These data also highlight a shift in female visual
preferences for men that is associated with important stages of the
lifespan. Visual preferences appear to track important hormonal changes
associated with age; as women pass puberty their preferences shift
towards facial traits associated with mate quality and as women undergo
menopause their preferences for such facial traits decrease. Overall,
these results demonstrate the important role of reproductive status and
support the notion that preferences for male faces are tied to
reproductively relevant hormones. |
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