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Testing a postulated case of intersexual selection in humans: The role of foot size in judgments of physical attractiveness and age
Authors:Daniel MT Fessler  Stefan Stieger  Salomi S Asaridou  Umeru Bahia  Mark Cravalho  Philip de Barros  Tiara Delgado  Maryanne L Fisher  David Frederick  Paulina Geraldo Perez  Cari Goetz  Kevin Haley  Jenée Jackson  Geoff Kushnick  Kevin Lew  Elizabeth Pain  Patrícia Piexinho Florindo  Anne Pisor  Evi Sinaga  Lasma Sinaga  Martin Voracek
Institution:1. Department of Psychology, University of Westminster, London, UK;2. Department of Psychology, HELP University College, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia;3. Department of Basic Psychological Research and Research Methods, School of Psychology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;4. Research Methods, Assessment, and iScience, Department of Psychology, University of Konstanz, Germany
Abstract:The constituents of attractiveness differ across the sexes. Many relevant traits are dimorphic, suggesting that they are the product of intersexual selection. However, direction of causality is generally difficult to determine, as aesthetic criteria can as readily result from, as cause, dimorphism. Women have proportionately smaller feet than men. Prior work on the role of foot size in attractiveness suggests an asymmetry across the sexes, as small feet enhance female appearance, yet average, rather than large, feet are preferred on men. Previous investigations employed crude stimuli and limited samples. Here, we report on multiple cross-cultural studies designed to overcome these limitations. With the exception of one rural society, we find that small foot size is preferred when judging women, yet no equivalent preference applies to men. Similarly, consonant with the thesis that a preference for youth underlies intersexual selection acting on women, we document an inverse relationship between foot size and perceived age. Examination of preferences regarding, and inferences from, feet viewed in isolation suggests different roles for proportionality and absolute size in judgments of female and male bodies. Although the majority of these results bolster the conclusion that pedal dimorphism is the product of intersexual selection, the picture is complicated by the reversal of the usual preference for small female feet found in one rural society. While possibly explicable in terms of greater emphasis on female economic productivity relative to beauty, the latter finding underscores the importance of employing diverse samples when exploring postulated evolved aesthetic preferences.
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