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Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
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Sex Differences in Judgments of Physical Attractiveness: A Social Relations Analysis

David K. Marcus

Rowland S. Miller

Sam Houston State University

Men and women rated the physical attractiveness of other men and women who were sitting nearby and were rated by them in return. They also provided meta-perceptions of how they thought those others rated them. Attractiveness ratings were partly a function of both the target being rated and the perceiver providing the ratings regardless of the sex of the perceiver or target, but the highest levels of consensus occurred when men judged the attractiveness of women and the highest levels of idiosyncrasy occurred when men rated other men. Meta-perceptions were also idiosyncratic; some believed that they were consistently considered attractive, whereas others thought they were seen as unattractive. People were aware of what others thought of them and, in particular, women’s meta-perceptions were highly related to men’s judgments of them. People agree about others’ attractiveness, and those who are attractive to others know they are pretty or handsome.

Key Words: physical attractiveness • sex differences • interpersonal perception

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 29, No. 3, 325-335 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/0146167202250193


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