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The Relationship of Female Physical Attractiveness to Body Fatness Publisher



Wang G1 ; Djafarian K2 ; Egedigwe CA3 ; El Hamdouchi A4 ; Ojiambo R5 ; Ramuth H6 ; Wallnerliebmann SJ7 ; Lackner S7 ; Diouf A8 ; Sauciuvenaite J9 ; Hambly C9 ; Vaanholt LM9 ; Faries MD10 ; Speakman JR1, 9
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. State Key Laboratory of Molecular Developmental Biology, Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
  2. 2. Department of Clinical Nutrition, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  3. 3. Department of Biochemistry, Michael Okpara University of Agriculture, Umuahia, Abia State, Nigeria
  4. 4. CNESTEN, Unite Mixte de Recherche Nutrition et Alimentation, CNESTEN-Universite Ibn Tofail, Rabat, Morocco
  5. 5. College of Health Science, School of Medicine, Medical Physiology Department, Moi University, Eldoret, Kenya
  6. 6. Biochemistry Department, Central health Laboratory services, Ministry of Health and Quality of Life, Mauritius
  7. 7. Center of Molecular Medicine, Institute of Pathophysiology and Immunology, Medical University Graz, Graz, Austria
  8. 8. Laboratoire de Nutrition, Departement de Biologie Animale, Faculte des Sciences et Techniques, Universite Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar, Dakar, Senegal
  9. 9. Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, United Kingdom
  10. 10. Stephen F. Austin State University, Nacogdoches, TX, United States

Source: PeerJ Published:2015


Abstract

Aspects of the female body may be attractive because they signal evolutionary fitness. Greater body fatness might reflect greater potential to survive famines, but individuals carrying larger fat stores may have poor health and lower fertility in non-famine conditions. A mathematical statistical model using epidemiological data linking fatness to fitness traits, predicted a peaked relationship between fatness and attractiveness (maximum at body mass index (BMI) = 22.8 to 24.8 depending on ethnicity and assumptions). Participants fromthree Caucasian populations (Austria, Lithuania and the UK), three Asian populations (China, Iran and Mauritius) and four African populations (Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria and Senegal) rated attractiveness of a series of female images varying in fatness (BMI) and waist to hip ratio (WHR). There was an inverse linear relationship between physical attractiveness and body fatness or BMI in all populations. Lower body fat was more attractive, down to at least BMI = 19. There was no peak in the relationship over the range we studied in any population. WHR was a significant independent but less important factor, which was more important (greater r2) in African populations. Predictions based on the fitness model were not supported. Raters appeared to use body fat percentage (BF%) and BMI as markers of age. The covariance of BF% and BMI with age indicates that the role of body fatness alone, as a marker of attractiveness, has been overestimated. © 2015 Wang et al.