by Kate Melville
The notion that women find "bad boys" sexually attractive gets reinforcement from a new study published in Emotion showing that happiness is not a sexually attractive emotion for men to display.
The University of British Columbia study found dramatic gender
differences in how men and women rank the sexual attractiveness of
commonly displayed emotions, including happiness, pride, and shame.
"This study finds that men and women respond very differently to
displays of emotion, including smiles," said Jessica Tracy, co-author of
the study. She believes the study is the first to measure the
attractiveness of smiles.
One-thousand adults participated in the study, rating the sexual
attractiveness of hundreds of images of the opposite sex engaged in
displays of happiness (broad smiles), pride (raised heads, puffed-up
chests) and shame (lowered heads, averted eyes).
The results showed that women were least attracted to smiling, happy
men, preferring those who looked proud and powerful or moody and
ashamed. In contrast, male participants were most sexually attracted to
women who looked happy, and least attracted to women who appeared proud
and confident.
Co-researcher Alec Beall said it was important to remember that the
study ranked sexual attractiveness, not suitability as a long-term
partner. "We were not asking participants if they thought these targets
would make a good boyfriend or wife - we wanted their gut reactions on
carnal, sexual attraction."
Discussing the findings, the researchers suggest that females are
attracted to male displays of pride (emphasizing upper body size and
muscularity) because they imply status, competence and an ability to
provide for a partner and offspring.
As far as the unsexy smile goes, Tracy says that the findings can be
understood in the contexts of evolutionary psychology and socio-cultural
gender norms. For example, past research has associated smiling with a
lack of dominance, which is consistent with traditional gender norms of
the "submissive and vulnerable" woman, but inconsistent with "strong,
silent" man. "Previous research has also suggested that happiness is a
particularly feminine-appearing expression," Beall adds.
Interestingly, they say the attractiveness of expressions of shame may
be linked to appeasement behaviors, which elicit trust in others. This
may explain shame's surprising sexiness to both genders; given that both
men and women prefer a partner they can trust.
The researchers are mulling future studies that would explore the
relationship between emotions and sexual attractiveness among
homosexuals and non-Western cultures.
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