Affiliation:
1. University of California, Los Angeles,
2. University of California, Los Angeles
Abstract
Evolutionary scientists propose that exaggerated secondary sexual characteristics are cues of genes that increase offspring viability or reproductive success. In six studies the hypothesis that muscularity is one such cue is tested. As predicted, women rate muscular men as sexier, more physically dominant and volatile, and less committed to their mates than nonmuscular men. Consistent with the inverted-U hypothesis of masculine traits, men with moderate muscularity are rated most attractive. Consistent with past research on fitness cues, across two measures, women indicate that their most recent short-term sex partners were more muscular than their other sex partners (d s = .36, .47). Across three studies, when controlling for other characteristics (e.g., body fat), muscular men rate their bodies as sexier to women (partial r s = .49-.62) and report more lifetime sex partners (partial r s = .20-.27), short-term partners (partial r s = .25-.28), and more affairs with mated women (partial r = .28).
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297 articles.
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