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Psychology Publications in Press AN
Glassenberg, DR Feinberg,
BC Jones,
AC Little &
LM DeBruine (in press).
Sex-Dimorphic Face Shape Preference in Heterosexual and
Homosexual Men and Women. Archives of Sexual
Behavior. Abstract Studies have used manipulated faces to test the
preferences of heterosexual individuals for sexually dimorphic facial cues. In
contrast to previous studies, which have generally excluded homosexual
participants, we directly compared homosexual and heterosexual male and female
preferences for manipulated sexual dimorphism in faces (homosexual males: n = 311;
heterosexual males: n = 215; homosexual females: n = 159;
heterosexual females: n = 218). Prior studies on sexual orientation and
preferences for faces that were paired with masculine and feminine behavioral
descriptors suggest that homosexual men prefer more masculine men and that
homosexual women demonstrate no preference for either masculinity or femininity
in women. In our study, we tested for similarities and differences among
heterosexual and homosexual males and females with regard to their preferences
for a more specific aspect of faces: sexual dimorphism of face shape. Homosexual
men demonstrated stronger preferences for masculinity in male faces than did all
of the other groups. Homosexual women demonstrated stronger preferences for
masculinity in female faces than did heterosexual women. These results suggest
attractiveness judgments of same-sex faces made by homosexual individuals are
not a mirror image of those made by heterosexual individuals of the opposite
sex. Our data suggest that face preferences of homosexual individuals reflect a
system of biologically and socially guided preferences at least as complex as
those found among heterosexual individuals. Click
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