Eyes Can’t Resist Beautiful People
Tuesday, September 18th, 2007by Andrea Thompson
LiveScience Staff Writer
LiveScience.com
Tue Sep 18, 10:40 AM ET
Whether we’re looking for someone to date or sizing up a potential
rival, our eyes irresistibly lock on to good-looking people, a new
study finds.
Participants,
all heterosexual men and women, fixated on highly attractive people
within the first half-second of seeing them. Single folks ogled the
opposite sex, of course. But those in committed relationships more
often eyed beautiful people of the same sex.
“If we’re interested in finding a mate, our attention gets quickly
and automatically stuck on attractive members of the opposite sex,”
explained study leader Jon Maner of the University of Florida.
“If we’re jealous and worried about our partner cheating on us,
attention gets quickly and automatically stuck on attractive people of
our own sex because they are our competitors.”
Maner’s research is based on the idea that evolution has primed our
brains to subconsciously latch on to signs of physical attractiveness
in others, both to find a mate and to guard him or her from potential competitors.
But this evolutionary trick is not without potential romantic peril.
Even some people in committed relationships had trouble tearing their
eyes away from attractive members of the opposite sex. On the other
hand, fixating on attractive people of the same sex as rivals could
contribute to feelings of insecurity.
Maner found that men prone to jealousy kept a close eye on attractive potential rivals.
“When it comes to concerns about infidelity, men are very attentive
to highly attractive guys because presumably their wives or girlfriends
may be too,” he said.
Maner’s experiments, which flashed pictures of attractive men and women and average-looking
men and women in front of participants and measured the time it took to
shift their attention away from the image, surprisingly showed little
difference between the sexes.
“Women paid just as much attention to men as men did to women,” Maner said.