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A new study challenges the common
perception that the hourglass figure for females – tiny waist, big breasts, and
curvy hips – is considered the perfect feminine shape. Scientists have long
said that women with curvy hips are healthier and have more babies. More
specifically, a curvy waist-to-hip ration of 0.7 or lower is associated with
higher fertility and lower rates of chronic disease. More than that, men prefer
women with a curvy waist-to-hip ratio of 0.7 or lower. Evolutionary
psychologists explain that the low ratio is a reliable single of a healthy woman
with higher fertility.
For the study, published in Current Anthropology, anthropologist Elizabeth
Cashdan of the University
of Utah analyzed data
from 33 non-Western populations and four European populations and found the
average waist-to-hip ratio for women is above 0.8. Androgens, which include
testosterone, increase waist-to-hip ratios in women by increasing visceral fat,
or belly fat. The hormones that make women physically stronger, more competitive
and better able to deal with stress also tend to redistribute fat from the hips
to the waist, Cashdan explained. “The hormonal profile associated with high [waist-to-hip
ratio] . . . may favor success in resource competition, particularly under
stressful circumstances,” writes Cashdan. “The androgenic effects—stamina,
initiative, risk-proneness, assertiveness, dominance—should be particularly
useful where a woman must depend on her own resources to support herself and
her family.”
Another interesting idea to keep in mind is
the fact that in countries where women tend to be economically independent,
like Britain or Denmark, men
may prefer the non-hourglass shape. In countries where women are economically
dependent on men (such as Japan,
Greece and Portugal) men
prefer the common ideal of female beauty, which is the hourglass shape. At the
same time, in some non-Western societies where women bear the responsibility
for finding food, men prefer larger waist-to-hip ratios.
As a general idea, women from around the
world tend to have larger waist-to-hips ratio than the optimal ratio, as
considered by medical and social stands. Cashdan suggests the differences
between men’s preferences in some societies have to do with sexual equality.
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