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Acorn

Acorn

⚠️This User is a Registered Economic Buttfucker
★★★★
Joined
Feb 17, 2024
Posts
811
Online time
3d 9h
20241021 000822


This hand has carried me through countless dark days by helping me coom through the despair.

Please respecc him.
 
Your hand doesn’t look bad at all, honestly
 
Mogs me, my hands looks like a kids ones
 
Wow. You must be tall
 
Take the handpill



Key Findings

1. Sexual Dimorphism in Hand Morphology

  • Hands and forearms exhibit significant sexual dimorphism, influenced by sex-typical hormone exposure.
  • Two sexually dimorphic components were identified from hand and forearm measurements, which were combined into an objective "hand masculinity index."

2. Associations with Other Sexually Dimorphic Traits

  • Sex-typical hand masculinity scores correlated with:
    • Sexually dimorphic facial features.
    • Greater symmetry.
    • Sex-typical 2D:4D ratios (lower for men, higher for women).
    • Lower finger ridge counts in both sexes.

3. Attractiveness and Masculinity/Femininity Preferences

  • Masculine hands and arms were rated as more attractive in men.
  • Feminine hands and arms were preferred in women.
  • For men, a combination of masculine hands with less masculine forearms was judged most attractive, suggesting a trade-off between perceived quality and parental investment.

4. Perceptions of Personality and Traits

  • Men with male-typical hand masculinity scores, low 2D:4D ratios, and high ridge counts were perceived as:
    • More masculine.
    • Dominant.
    • Intelligent.
    • Healthy.
    • Good potential parents.
  • Women with feminine hands, high 2D:4D ratios, and high ridge counts were rated as more feminine.

5. Consistency with Facial Attractiveness Research

  • Many findings aligned with prior research on facial attractiveness:
    • Masculine traits in men and feminine traits in women are generally preferred.
    • Symmetry plays a role in attractiveness judgments.

6. Dermatoglyphic Patterns (Finger Ridge Counts)

  • Finger ridge counts were sexually dimorphic (higher in men).
  • Ridge count asymmetry was linked to developmental stability and hormonal influences during prenatal development.

7. Cultural and Biological Influences

  • Preferences for hand features may be shaped by both evolutionary adaptations (e.g., mate quality indicators) and cultural or ecological factors (e.g., local marriage systems or life history strategies).

8. Implications for Mate Choice

  • Hands may provide cues to sex-typical hormone exposure, health, and genetic quality, similar to faces.
  • These cues could influence mate choice decisions.
 
Take the handpill



Key Findings

1. Sexual Dimorphism in Hand Morphology

  • Hands and forearms exhibit significant sexual dimorphism, influenced by sex-typical hormone exposure.
  • Two sexually dimorphic components were identified from hand and forearm measurements, which were combined into an objective "hand masculinity index."

2. Associations with Other Sexually Dimorphic Traits

  • Sex-typical hand masculinity scores correlated with:
    • Sexually dimorphic facial features.
    • Greater symmetry.
    • Sex-typical 2D:4D ratios (lower for men, higher for women).
    • Lower finger ridge counts in both sexes.

3. Attractiveness and Masculinity/Femininity Preferences

  • Masculine hands and arms were rated as more attractive in men.
  • Feminine hands and arms were preferred in women.
  • For men, a combination of masculine hands with less masculine forearms was judged most attractive, suggesting a trade-off between perceived quality and parental investment.

4. Perceptions of Personality and Traits

  • Men with male-typical hand masculinity scores, low 2D:4D ratios, and high ridge counts were perceived as:
    • More masculine.
    • Dominant.
    • Intelligent.
    • Healthy.
    • Good potential parents.
  • Women with feminine hands, high 2D:4D ratios, and high ridge counts were rated as more feminine.

5. Consistency with Facial Attractiveness Research

  • Many findings aligned with prior research on facial attractiveness:
    • Masculine traits in men and feminine traits in women are generally preferred.
    • Symmetry plays a role in attractiveness judgments.

6. Dermatoglyphic Patterns (Finger Ridge Counts)

  • Finger ridge counts were sexually dimorphic (higher in men).
  • Ridge count asymmetry was linked to developmental stability and hormonal influences during prenatal development.

7. Cultural and Biological Influences

  • Preferences for hand features may be shaped by both evolutionary adaptations (e.g., mate quality indicators) and cultural or ecological factors (e.g., local marriage systems or life history strategies).

8. Implications for Mate Choice

  • Hands may provide cues to sex-typical hormone exposure, health, and genetic quality, similar to faces.
  • These cues could influence mate choice decisions.
Brutal handpill
 
I dont know why i expected an pidgeon hand, when they dont even have hands.
 
You're hand is...
handsome
 
Looks don’t matter bro

1738902490746
 

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