TY - JOUR
T1 - Female Preferences for Male Vocal and Facial Masculinity in Videos
AU - O'Connor, Jillian
AU - Feinberg, David
AU - Fraccaro, Paul
AU - Borak, Diana
AU - Tigue, Cara
AU - Re, Daniel
AU - Jones, Benedict
AU - Little, Anthony
AU - Tiddeman, Bernie
N1 - O'Connor, J., Feinberg, D., Fraccaro, P., Borak, D., Tigue, C., Re, D., Jones, B., Little, A., Tiddeman, B. (2012). Female Preferences for Male Vocal and Facial Masculinity in Videos. Advances in Ethology, 118 (4), 321-330
PY - 2012/4/1
Y1 - 2012/4/1
N2 - Vocal and facial masculinity are cues to underlying testosterone in men and influence women’s mate preferences. Consistent with the proposal that facial and vocal masculinity signal common information about men, prior work has revealed correlated female preferences for male facial and vocal masculinity. Previous studies have assessed women’s preferences for male facial and vocal masculinity by presenting faces and voices independently and using static face stimuli. By contrast, here we presented women with short video clips in which male faces and voices were simultaneously manipulated in masculinity. We found that women who preferred masculine faces also preferred masculine voices. Furthermore, women whose faces were rated as relatively more attractive preferred both facial and vocal masculinity more than did women whose faces were rated as less attractive. These findings complement other evidence for cross-modal masculinity preferences among women and demonstrate that preferences observed in studies using still images and/or independently presented vocal stimuli are also observed when dynamic faces and voices are displayed simultaneously in video format.
AB - Vocal and facial masculinity are cues to underlying testosterone in men and influence women’s mate preferences. Consistent with the proposal that facial and vocal masculinity signal common information about men, prior work has revealed correlated female preferences for male facial and vocal masculinity. Previous studies have assessed women’s preferences for male facial and vocal masculinity by presenting faces and voices independently and using static face stimuli. By contrast, here we presented women with short video clips in which male faces and voices were simultaneously manipulated in masculinity. We found that women who preferred masculine faces also preferred masculine voices. Furthermore, women whose faces were rated as relatively more attractive preferred both facial and vocal masculinity more than did women whose faces were rated as less attractive. These findings complement other evidence for cross-modal masculinity preferences among women and demonstrate that preferences observed in studies using still images and/or independently presented vocal stimuli are also observed when dynamic faces and voices are displayed simultaneously in video format.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/2160/11896
U2 - 10.1111/j.1439-0310.2011.02013.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1439-0310.2011.02013.x
M3 - Article
SN - 0179-1613
VL - 118
SP - 321
EP - 330
JO - Ethology
JF - Ethology
IS - 4
ER -