The importance of attractiveness depends on where you live

December 15, 2009

Do good-looking people really benefit from their looks, and in what ways? A team of researchers from the University of Georgia and the University of Kansas found that yes; attractive people do tend to have more social relationships and therefore an increased sense of psychological well-being. This seems like common sense, and might be why we spend billions of dollars each year trying to become more attractive. However, the study, published in this month's issue of Personal Relationships, also determines that the importance of attractiveness is not universal; rather, it is determined by where we live.

The importance of attractiveness in everyday life is not fixed, or simply a matter of human nature. Instead, the impact of our attractiveness on our social lives depends on the where we live. Attractiveness does matter in more socially mobile, urban areas (and from a woman's point of view actually indicates psychological well-being), but it is far less relevant in rural areas.

In urban areas individuals experience a high level of social choice, and associating with people is one of those choices. In other words, in urban areas, a free market of relationships makes attractiveness more important for securing and consequently for feeling good. In rural areas, relationships are less about choice and more about who is already living in the community. Therefore, attractiveness is less likely to be associated with making friends and feeling good.

Furthermore, urban women need not have below average looks in order to experience a diminished sense of well-being and social life. Dr. Victoria C. Plaut and her team studied women at mid-life in the U.S. based on data related to their well-being, social connectedness, and their body attractiveness (assessed with a calculation of their waist-to-hip ratio). Plaut points out, "In the field of psychology, research results are generally seen as having a natural and universal applicability. This research suggests that this is far from being the case. Rather, the importance of attractiveness varies with certain sociocultural environments, and, if you think about it, urban environments are actually a relatively recent addition to human life."

More information: To view the abstract for this article, please visit http://www3.inters … Y=1&SRETRY=0

Provided by Wiley-Blackwell

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RobertKarlStonjek
Dec 15, 2009

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Everyone is attractive to someone or something eg attractive to fraudsters, exploiters, worshipers, flies etc. The article assumes, but does not explicitly state, attractiveness to prospective life partners, sexual partners, and social acquaintances and probably considers photographic or static qualities rather than transactional or dynamic qualities ~ ever see the ugly photograph come to life as a beautiful person you want to know and to be around?
The most salient aspect of *transactional* attractiveness is the belief and attitude of the person and their ability to display their beauty dynamically ie by their actions and attitude. Generally, for sexual and prospective marital partners, females seem to be informed more by dynamic than static attractiveness and men are generally the reverse, at least in the first instance, and so are attracted to the static aspect of a female's beauty but this dichotomy is far less in evidence when prospective friends and colleagues are considered.
jgelt
Dec 16, 2009

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Possibly the desensitization of an urban environment tend to make attention-getting behaviors more elaborate.
First impressions may assume greater importance if there's only one shot.
Urban environments as markets for personal interactions present an economy of abundance as opposed to the scarcity of low and static population.
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