If you are a person that believes that everyone has their
soulmate out there, recent research suggests that if you’re looking for a male
soulmate, that soulmate may have a higher chance of success at wooing you if he
has a wider face.
Apparently, when put to the test through speed dating and
follow-up studies, men with wide faces had a higher chance of being chosen for
a second date and are perceived as being more attractive. However, there are
some technicalities and exceptions to this research.
The first exception
is that having a wider face was also perceived with having a dominant
personality. The research failed to distinguish whether this perception or the
facial width was the determining cause in what actually led to the increased
success with speed dating.
The second exception is that although men with wide faces
were perceived as being more attractive, this only applied to short-term
relationships. Long-term relationships did not show the same results. One of
the other problems with this research is that it definitely showed a bias
towards dominant males.
Starting out a research study by stating that dominant men
are preferred as mates by ovulating women and those seeking short-term
relationships clearly states that bias and researchers that show this kind of
explicit bias are extremely hard to take seriously.
The article basically states that less-dominant males have
no chance with the female gender. The authors go on to state that women who
have sex with dominant and aggressive men are more likely to have orgasms.
The problem with this line of research and thinking is that
it promotes aggressiveness, which can and does lead to domestic violence and
abuse. These two things are not attractive at all, in my opinion, and I believe
there are many women out there that will agree with me.
Finally, suggesting that dominant men are more fertile than
less-dominant males is almost laughable and not based on any scientific
research at all. The final thing that I would say about this study is that it
focused exclusively on speed dating, while trying to apply its results to all
dating experiences, which is a pretty big no-no in the psychological world.
Post a Comment