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Lordosis in humans: women's accurate perceptions of men's context-dependent preferences
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Lordosis in humans: women's accurate perceptions of men's context-dependent preferences

Jessica Ranson, Orion Read, Ayten Yesim Semchenko, Zeynep Senveli, Mitchell R.L. Forrest, Jonathon Flores, Vojtěch Fiala, Laith Al-Shawaf and David M.G. Lewis
Personality and individual differences, Vol.204, 112004
2023

Abstract

Attractiveness Context effects Dynamic stimuli Human mating Lordosis Lumbar curvature Mate preferences Nonverbal courtship behavior
Semchenko and colleagues (in press) recently disentangled two evolutionary hypotheses and demonstrated that heterosexual men have mate preferences for both the morphological cue of women's lumbar curvature and the behavioral cue of back arching: Men are attracted to an intermediate degree of lumbar curvature in both short-term and long-term mating contexts, and, independent of this preference, are attracted to lordosis behavior in short-term, but not long-term, mating contexts. No research to date has investigated whether women are aware of these preferences. There are a priori reasons to expect this to be the case: An awareness of these preferences could functionally guide both appearance-enhancement and intrasexual competition strategies. Here, we tested whether women have accurate perceptions of men's preferences in the lumbar region. Across two studies (Ns = 177, 293), we found that women's perceptions align precisely with men's preferences: Women perceive men to be attracted to cues to lordosis behavior in short-term but not long-term contexts, and to be attracted to an intermediate angle of lumbar curvature independent of mating context. We hope these findings, which document previously unknown features of women's mating psychology, inspire investigations into how women might adaptively use their accurate perceptions of men's mate preferences. •We tested whether women accurately perceive men's mate preferences.•Women accurately perceived men's preference for lumbar curvature.•Women accurately perceived men's context-dependent attraction to lordosis behavior.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.73 Social Psychology
6.73.1369 Evolutionary Psychology
Web Of Science research areas
Psychology, Social
ESI research areas
Psychiatry/Psychology
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