Shackelford and Larsen found that people with symmetrical faces are rated as more attractive. This is because it may be a signal of genetic fitness
People are also attracted to faces with neotenous features (baby-face) because these trigger a protective and caring instinct. This would be important for women wanting to reproduce
The Halo effect:
Physical attractiveness is also important because we tend to believe that attractive people have positive personality traits
This is the physical attractiveness stereotype
E.g. Dion et al. Found that physically attractive people are constantly rated as kind, strong, sociable and successful compared to unattractive people
The Matching Hypothesis:
This hypothesis suggests that people choose romantic partners who are roughly of similar physical attractiveness to each other
To do this we have to make a realistic judgement about our own ‘value’ to a potential partner
We all desire the most physically attractive partner possible
HOWEVER, we balance this against the wish to avoid being rejected by someone ‘out of our league’ who might not find us physically attractive
AO3:
A strength of the halo effect is that research appears to support the theory
Palmer and Peterson (2012) found that physically attractive people were rated as morepolitically knowledgeable and competent than unattractive people
This has implications for the political process because people may thing politicians are suitable for office just because they are physically attractive
It shows that physical attractiveness is an important factor in the formation of both romantic and non-romantic relationships
AO3:
A limitation of the research suggesting that physical attractiveness is an important factor in attraction is that not all individuals think physical attractiveness is important.
Towhey (1979) found that those who scored higher on a scale of sexism cared more about physical attractiveness when choosing whether they liked an individual, whereas those who scored lower on the sexism scale cared less about physical attractiveness
This suggests that physical attractiveness is not always the most important factor for individuals when forming a relationship
AO3:
A strength of the matching hypothesis is that research appears to support it
Feingold (1988) carried out a meta-analysis of 17 studies and found a significant correlation in ratings of attractiveness between romantic partners
This supports the matching hypothesis as it shows that individuals tend to choose romantic partners who are of a similar level of attractiveness to them. It also looked at actual couples, which is a more realistic approach.
AO3:
Support for the importance of physical attractiveness in attraction comes from cross cultural research
Research by Cunningham et al. (1995) suggests that the features that are viewed as ‘attractive’ are the same across white, Hispanic and Asian males.
This suggests that physical attractiveness is important in the formation of relationships regardless of culture
Therefore, perhaps the features that we find attractive are due to evolution rather than culture