Rosanna Sains’s research while affiliated with University of Queensland and other places

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Publications (1)


An example of the stimuli that were used in the current study. Stimuli depict composite faces comprised five males photographed with full beard (bottom row) and again when clean-shaven (top row). The composites were manipulated to appear 60% and 30% feminized, unmanipulated, and 30% and 60% masculinized.
Mean ratings (±1 s.e.m.) for attractiveness when judging short-term (a) and long-term (b) relationships for bearded (black circles) and clean-shaven (white circles). The composites were manipulated to appear 60% and 30% feminized, unmanipulated, and 30% and 60% masculinized. Note that the full rating scale ranges from 0 to 100.
The associations between women's ectoparasite, moral, pathogen and sexual disgust and their attractiveness ratings for male facial masculinity. The lines represent the different levels of facial masculinity. The data represent regression lines (±95% confidence interval). The full rating scale ranges from 0 to 100.
The associations between women's ectoparasite, moral, pathogen and sexual disgust and their attractiveness ratings for male beardedness when judging bearded faces (red line) and clean-shaven faces (green line). Data show regression lines (±95% confidence interval). Note that the full rating scale ranges from 0 to 100.
The associations between ectoparasite, moral, pathogen and sexual disgust and women's attractiveness ratings when judging a short-term relationship (green line) and a long-term relationship (red line). Data show regression lines (±95% confidence interval). Note that the full rating scale ranges from 0 to 100.

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A multivariate analysis of women's mating strategies and sexual selection on men's facial morphology
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2020

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1,161 Reads

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55 Citations

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Morgan J. Sidari

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Rosanna Sains

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[...]

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The strength and direction of sexual selection via female choice on masculine facial traits in men is a paradox in human mate choice research. While masculinity may communicate benefits to women and offspring directly (i.e. resources) or indirectly (i.e. health), masculine men may be costly as long-term partners owing to lower paternal investment. Mating strategy theory suggests women's preferences for masculine traits are strongest when the costs associated with masculinity are reduced. This study takes a multivariate approach to testing whether women's mate preferences are context-dependent. Women (n = 919) rated attractiveness when considering long-term and short-term relationships for male faces varying in beardedness (clean-shaven and full beards) and facial masculinity (30% and 60% feminized, unmanipulated, 30% and 60% masculinized). Participants then completed scales measuring pathogen, sexual and moral disgust, disgust towards ectoparasites, reproductive ambition, self-perceived mate value and the facial hair in partners and fathers. In contrast to past research, we found no associations between pathogen disgust, self-perceived mate value or reproductive ambition and facial masculinity preferences. However, we found a significant positive association between moral disgust and preferences for masculine faces and bearded faces. Preferences for beards were lower among women with higher ectoparasite disgust, providing evidence for ectoparasite avoidance hypothesis. However, women reporting higher pathogen disgust gave higher attractiveness ratings for bearded faces than women reporting lower pathogen disgust, providing support for parasite-stress theories of sexual selection and mate choice. Preferences for beards were also highest among single and married women with the strongest reproductive ambition. Overall, our results reflect mixed associations between individual differences in mating strategies and women's mate preferences for masculine facial traits.

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Citations (1)


... This study demonstrated that the prevalence of infectious diseases predicts collectivism, even after controlling for confounding variables such as Gross Domestic Product (GDP), wealth distribution inequality, and population density. Following the publication of this landmark paper, the historical pathogen prevalence index (Murray & Schaller, 2010) has been used for cross-cultural studies (e.g., Gorodnichenko & Roland, 2017;Bastian et al., 2019), and the theoretical framework that PST provides has guided research in various domains of evolutionary psychology like women's mate preferences (Clarkson et al., 2020), men's beardedness (Pazhoohi & Kingstone, 2020), and personality traits (Mullett et al., 2020). ...

Reference:

Ecological Threats and Cultural Systems
A multivariate analysis of women's mating strategies and sexual selection on men's facial morphology