Female waist-to-hip ratio, body mass index and sexual attractiveness in China
Author(s) -
Barnaby Dixson,
Baoguo Li,
Alan F. Dixson
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
current zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.971
H-Index - 38
eISSN - 2058-5888
pISSN - 1674-5507
DOI - 10.1093/czoolo/56.2.175
Subject(s) - attractiveness , body mass index , waist , demography , waist–hip ratio , buttocks , china , psychology , medicine , geography , surgery , endocrinology , sociology , archaeology , psychoanalysis
Men and women at Northwest University (n=751), Xi'an, China were asked to judge the attractiveness of photo- graphs of female patients who had undergone micrograft surgery to reduce their waist-to-hip ratios (WHR). Micrograft surgery involves harvesting adipose tissue from the waist and reshaping the buttocks to produce a low WHR and an 'hourglass' female figure. This gynoid distribution of female body fat has been shown to correlate with measures of fertility and health. Significantly larger numbers of subjects, of both sexes, chose post-operative photographs, with lower WHRs, as more attractive than pre-operative photographs of the same women. Some patients had gained, and some had lost weight, post-operatively, with resul- tant changes in body mass index (BMI). However, these changes in BMI were not related to judgments of attractiveness. These results show that the hourglass female figure is rated as attractive in China, and that WHR, rather than BMI, plays a crucial role in such attractiveness judgments (Current Zoology 56 (2): 175-181, 2010).
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