HONG KONG (Reuters) - Women can tell with some accuracy whether
an unfamiliar male is faithful simply by looking at his face, but men seem to
lack the same ability when checking out women, according to an Australian study
published on Wednesday.
In a paper that appeared in the journal Biology Letters, the researchers
found that women tended to make that judgment based on how masculine-looking
the man was.
"Women's ratings of unfaithfulness
showed small-moderate, significant correlations with measures of actual
infidelity," wrote the team, led by Gillian Rhodes at the ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its
Disorders at the University of Western Australia in Perth.
"More masculine-looking men (were) rated as more probable to be
unfaithful and having a sexual history of being more unfaithful."Attractiveness was not a factor in the women making the link.
In the study, 34 men and 34 women were
shown colour photographs of 189 Caucasian adult faces and asked to rate them
for faithfulness.
The researchers compared their answers to the self-reported sexual histories
of the 189 individuals and found that the women participants were better able
to tell who was faithful and who was not."We provide the first evidence that faithfulness judgments, based solely on facial appearance, have a kernel of truth," they wrote in the paper.
Men, on the other hand, seemed to have no clue. They tended to perceive attractive, feminine women to be unfaithful, when there was no evidence that they were, the scientists noted.
Faithfulness is seen as important in the
context of sexual relationships and mate choice, the scientists wrote in the
paper. Men with unfaithful partners risk raising another man's child, while
women with unfaithful partners risk losing some, or even all, parental and
other resources to competitors.
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