idkwattodowithlife
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The relationship between facial shape and attractiveness has been extensively studied, yet few studies have investigated the underlying biological factors of an attractive face. Many researchers have proposed a link between female attractiveness and sex hormones, but there is little empirical evidence in support of this assumption. In the present study we investigated the relationship between circulating sex hormones and attractiveness. We created prototypes by separately averaging photographs of 15 women with high and low levels of testosterone, oestradiol, and testosterone-to-oestradiol ratio levels, respectively. An independent set of facial images was then shape transformed toward these prototypes. We paired the resulting images in such a way that one face depicted a female with high hormone level and the other one with a low hormone level. Fifty participants were asked to choose the more attractive face of each pair. We found that low testosterone-to-oestradiol ratio and low testosterone were positively associated with female facial attractiveness. There was no preference for faces with high oestradiol levels. In an additional experiment with 36 participants we confirmed that a low testosterone-to-oestradiol ratio plays a larger role than low testosterone alone. These results provide empirical evidence that an attractive female face is shaped by interacting effects of testosterone and oestradiol.
Not only testosterone affects us men, but it also affects women, as it could give some angularity, and aesthetics to feminine features. Which is quite strange being that in the modern day dating of how most young women are shooting to date androgenic like men (low test to high steroidal), which ties into the fact that a lot of women are bi-curious. Vice versa with a bit of men finding women with higher testosterone to be more attractive (not a majority though).
I guess here's an example of a women with high test:
But of course all in all, most men prefer women with a low testosterone to a high osteradiol ratio.
Source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25730636