Male attraction to various female forms has varied through the ages due to certain features that were valued in a particular location or era. Evolution depends on the survival of the fittest, at least in Darwin's eyes and many evolutionists that have come after, but that can mean very different things to different people. Of course, there is the case of the butterfly group which survived for many years with white and black-winged varietals, but then became all black-winged when the forest they nested in was burned. Many similar examples can be found in studies that suggest that survival is related to attractiveness also. The ability of a man or woman to survive is subconsciously determined in the brain, and then translated to a hierarchical system of attractiveness. Thus, the reason that attractiveness elements have changed over time for men with regard to women, is because society has changed. If men in poor areas of the world were surveyed, they would probably have a very different idea about what made a woman attractive than those men in relatively financially secure and safe regions. Along these lines, a study was conducted with the goal of trying to determine if men under stress would consider a different female body size attractive. This paper summarizes the study's goals, methods, results and discussion to determine if the authors reached any statistically significant conclusions with regard to the research question.
Goal
The researchers were interested in how men saw women when they were under stress and whether any difference would show itself even if the subject knew that an experiment was being conducted and that the stressor would be short lived. They assumed that men under stress would choose a woman with a fuller body shape, and they gave two primary reasons or their assumption. First, other research had shown that "heavier body sizes are perceived as more...
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