Best Female Figure Not an Hourglass

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Best Female Figure Not an Hourglass

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http://www.livescience.com/health/08120 ... igure.html

Best Female Figure Not an Hourglass

By LiveScience Staff

posted: 03 December 2008 10:06 am ET
Marilyn Monroe was widely considered to have the perfect hourglass figure with measurements of 36-24-34. (Here, Monroe poses while in character for "The Seven Year Itch" in Manhattan on Sept. 9, 1954.) Credit: AP Photo/Matty Zimmerman.
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Marilyn Monroe was widely considered to have the perfect hourglass figure with measurements of 36-24-34. (Here, Monroe poses while in character for "The Seven Year Itch" in Manhattan on Sept. 9, 1954.) Credit: AP Photo/Matty Zimmerman.

An imperfect body might be just what the doctor ordered for women and key to their economic success, an anthropologist now says.

While pop culture seems to worship the hourglass figure for females, with a tiny waist, big boobs and curvy hips à la Marilyn Monroe, this may not be optimal, says Elizabeth Cashdan of the University of Utah.

That's because 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.

So in societies and situations where women are under pressure to procure resources and otherwise bring home the bacon, they may be less likely to have the classic hourglass figure, Cashdan hypothesizes in the December issue of the journal Current Anthropology.

Curve crazy

Until now, scientists (and apparently Western society) thought a curvy figure trumped other body shapes. The idea was based on results from medical studies that suggested a curvy waist-to-hip ratio of 0.7 or lower (meaning the waist is significantly narrower than the hips) is associated with higher fertility and lower rates of chronic disease.

In addition, past research has revealed that men prefer a ratio of 0.7 or lower when looking for a mate. The preference makes perfect sense, according to evolutionary psychologists, because the low ratio is a reliable signal of a healthy, fertile woman. Along those lines, Playboy centerfolds tend to have a waist-to-hip ratio of 0.68, Cashdan found.

However, women around the world tend to have larger waist-to-hip ratios (more cylindrical than hourglass-shaped) than is considered optimal by these medical and social standards.

Specifically, Cashdan compiled data from 33 non-Western populations and four European populations, finding the average waist-to-hip ratio for women was above 0.8. So if 0.7 is the magic number both in terms of health and male mate choice, Cashdan wondered why most women exhibit a significantly higher ratio.

That's where the hormones come in.

A little testosterone

Androgens, a class of hormones that includes testosterone, increase waist-to-hip ratios in women by increasing visceral fat, which is carried around the waist. But on the upside, increased androgen levels are also associated with increased strength, stamina and competitiveness. Cortisol, a hormone that helps the body deal with stressful situations, also increases fat carried around the waist.

Hormone levels linked with a high waist-to-hip ratio could lead to such health benefits, which would be particularly useful during times of stress, Cashdan said. These benefits could outweigh those attained from having the tiny waist, hourglass figure, she said.

Perhaps the differences between predominant body shapes in some societies have to do with sexual equality, Cashdan said.

In Japan, Greece and Portugal, where women tend to be less economically independent, men place a higher value on a mate's thin waist than men in Britain or Denmark, where there tends to be more sexual equality, Cashdan said. And in some non-Western societies where food is scarce and women bear the responsibility for finding it, men actually prefer larger waist-to-hip ratios.

"Waist-to-hip ratio may indeed be a useful signal to men, then, but whether men prefer a [waist-to-hip ratio] associated with lower or higher androgen/estrogen ratios (or value them equally) should depend on the degree to which they want their mates to be strong, tough, economically successful and politically competitive," Cashdan writes.

She added, "And from a woman's perspective, men's preferences are not the only thing that matters."
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happywonton
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Re: Best Female Figure Not an Hourglass

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Post by happywonton »

Although boobs would be great, I think I prefer cylinder shaped girls. :(

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bd55
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Re: Best Female Figure Not an Hourglass

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Post by bd55 »

hehe, optimal for a "strong and competitive" woman. Aesthetics do not necessarily go together with physical, chemical or biological performance. I do prefer a more femenine body rather than a scientifically optimal one.

As to the distribution of such ratios and preference, it is normal that they do not match. In general we are attracted more to what we do not have in abundance. In beauty as in almost everything else, the law of supply and demand is a reality. In some cultures, being overweight is a symbol of prosperity and thus overweight women, which are "rare", are more appreciated than skinny ones. Beauty lies in the eye of the beholder but also in our definition of beauty in itself.

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AYHJA
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Re: Best Female Figure Not an Hourglass

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Post by AYHJA »

Whatever ratio women like Kim Kardashian and Aria Giovanni and Monica Bellucci have, that's what rocks...Interesting info though, kinda related to a post I made on my blogger a while ago about the Golden Ratio...

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hotheat
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Re: Best Female Figure Not an Hourglass

#5

Post by hotheat »

yep, interesting article. but... not likely to change a man's preference. ;)

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Re: Best Female Figure Not an Hourglass

#6

Post by testr »

Where do our preferences come from? Like if we were used to seeing hourglass figures all out lives would we be preferring anothe r shape since to us it is more rare?

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