21 research outputs found
What big ears you have: The European 'right of access' and technological implementations
PROLACTINOMAS PRESENTING AS PRIMARY AMENORRHOEA AND DELAYED OR ARRESTED PUBERTY: RESPONSE TO MEDICAL THERAPY
Stratigraphy of the upper carboniferous and lower permian sequence, southern Sydney Basin
Implications of isotopic fractionation and temperature on rate of formation of temperate shelf carbonates, eastern Tasmania, Australia
Preferences for body mass index and waist-to-hip ratio do not vary with observer age
Several studies have suggested that mate selection strategies alter with age, but the mechanism of this shift in mate strategy is unclear. Two possibilities suggest themselves. The first is that attractiveness preferences themselves alter, compensating for the changing mate value of the observer. Alternatively, the preferences may remain constant with observer age, but an individual may compensate for changes in their own relative attractiveness by consciously targeting different regions of the "attractiveness spectrum" as their own mate value changes. To address this question, we asked 142 Caucasian subjects (aged 18–87 years) to rate 50 photographs of women varying in lower body shape (the waist-hip ratio, or WHR), and overall body mass (body mass index, or BMI). We found no effects of observer age on attractiveness preferences. This suggests that the criteria for attractiveness do not alter with changing observer age, and instead that it is the strategies employed using this information that may change