Further evidence for regional variation in women's masculinity preferences.

scientific article published on 8 December 2010

Further evidence for regional variation in women's masculinity preferences. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1098/RSPB.2010.2200
P8608Fatcat IDrelease_bz3ha2lo7rffjaad4mn45qv34y
P932PMC publication ID3049056
P5875ResearchGate publication ID49673700

P50authorLisa M. DeBruineQ22011085
Benedict JonesQ43131678
Anthony C. LittleQ43212780
P2093author name stringJohn R. Crawford
Lisa L. M. Welling
P2860cites workExposure to visual cues of pathogen contagion changes preferences for masculinity and symmetry in opposite-sex faces.Q51530303
National income inequality predicts women's preferences for masculinized faces better than health does.Q51612660
The health of a nation predicts their mate preferences: cross-cultural variation in women's preferences for masculinized male faces.Q55052679
P433issue1707
P1104number of pages2
P304page(s)813-814
P577publication date2010-12-08
P1433published inProceedings of the Royal Society BQ2625424
P1476titleFurther evidence for regional variation in women's masculinity preferences.
P478volume278

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q59292685Cross-Cultural Variation in Mate Preferences for Averageness, Symmetry, Body Size, and Masculinity
Q33837250Cross-cultural agreement in facial attractiveness preferences: the role of ethnicity and gender
Q37614578Discriminating males and unpredictable females: males differentiate self-similar facial cues more than females in the judgment of opposite-sex attractiveness
Q36733532Do men's faces really signal heritable immunocompetence?
Q46132542Domestic violence shapes Colombian women's partner choices.
Q57542886Effects of Sexually Dimorphic Shape Cues on Neurophysiological Correlates of Women’s Face Processing
Q34999093Environmental influences on mate preferences as assessed by a scenario manipulation experiment
Q48490092Extending parasite-stress theory to variation in human mate preferences
Q34181868Facial attractiveness: evolutionary based research
Q56536367Feminism and Evolutionary Psychology: Moving Forward
Q34407689Human preferences for sexually dimorphic faces may be evolutionarily novel
Q42200464Integrating shape cues of adiposity and color information when judging facial health and attractiveness
Q34229287Mate preferences and infectious disease: theoretical considerations and evidence in humans.
Q56485301Meta-Analysis of Menstrual Cycle Effects on Women’s Mate Preferences
Q33778300Microbes and masculinity: Does exposure to pathogenic cues alter women's preferences for male facial masculinity and beardedness?
Q56689074Pathogen disgust predicts women’s preferences for masculinity in men’s voices, faces, and bodies
Q47973886Reproductive ambition predicts partnered, but not unpartnered, women's preferences for masculine men.
Q44844347Secular trends in cranial morphological traits: a socioeconomic perspective of change and sexual dimorphism in North Americans 1849-1960.
Q34257960Sexual selection on human faces and voices
Q48457597The parasite-stress theory may be a general theory of culture and sociality
Q50878892Variation in Women's Preferences Regarding Male Facial Masculinity Is Better Explained by Genetic Differences Than by Previously Identified Context-Dependent Effects.
Q39148724What can cross-cultural correlations teach us about human nature?
Q64069922Women's preferences for men's facial masculinity are strongest under favorable ecological conditions

Search more.