Attractiveness also depends on where you stay
December 25th, 2009 - 5:07 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )Washington, Dec 25 (IANS) Do good-looking people really benefit from their looks, and in what ways? A team of researchers found that attractive people have more social relationships and an increased sense of psychological well-being.
This seems like common sense, and might be why we spend billions of dollars each year trying to become more attractive.
However, the study also determines that the importance of attractiveness is not universal; rather, it is determined by where we live.
In urban areas, individuals experience a high level of social choice, and associating with attractive people is one of those choices.
In other words, a free market of relationships makes attractiveness more important for securing social connections and consequently for feeling good.
In rural areas, relationships are less about choice and more about who is already living in the community. Therefore, attractiveness is less likely to be associated with making friends and feeling good.
Victoria C. Plaut, a psychologist at the University of Georgia, and her team studied women at mid-life, based on data related to their well-being, social connectedness, and their body attractiveness (waist-to-hip ratio).
Plaut points out “the importance of attractiveness varies with certain socio-cultural environments, and, if you think about it, urban environments are actually a relatively recent addition to human life”, according to a Georgia release.
These findings were published in the latest issue of Personal Relationships.
- Good-looking people really do benefit from their looks - Dec 16, 2009
- Being apple 'no worse for health' than being a pear - Mar 11, 2011
- Wider hips protect against diabetes - Jan 24, 2012
- Beer belly or muffin top double mortality risk in heart disease patients - May 03, 2011
- Happy kids make happy adults - Feb 26, 2011
- Male fish extremely choosy about mates - Oct 12, 2011
- Men who feel discriminated likely to have bigger tummy - Apr 13, 2011
- Having a job, not amount of salary key to happy life - Jan 10, 2011
- Female conformists likely to have negative body image - Jan 15, 2010
- Work is good for our health - Mar 30, 2011
- Taking regular breaks from sitting good for heart, waistline - Jan 12, 2011
- Midlife crisis is more hype than truth: Experts - Feb 23, 2011
- Modern women not as shapely as they would like to think - Feb 21, 2011
- The science behind beautiful faces revealed - Dec 22, 2010
- Inability to imagine future prevents us from saving up in the present: Study - Dec 23, 2010
Tags: attractiveness, billions of dollars, choices, common sense, dec 25, dollars each year, good looking people, mid life, personal relationships, psychologist, rural areas, social choice, social connectedness, social connections, social relationships, university of georgia, urban areas, urban environments, victoria c, waist to hip ratio