The Most Attractive And High Quality Dance Moves For Females According To Psychologists!
Psychologists from Northumbria University in the United Kingdom measures the dance moves in human attraction. They observed 39 female participants while they rocked to the music from Robbie Williams' song.
According to the study, which was published in the journal Scientific Reports, psychologists disclosed the most enticing dance steps for females. The process was similar to a former study involving males.
The 39 female college students executed dance steps to a pop song, while equipped with motion entrapping detectors. Their moves were then examined into a computer, plotted onto a featureless avatar to prevent interferences to the study's results. Biomechanists and statisticians evaluated the participants with their corresponding moves.
The new female-centric study reveals that ideal dance moves are mostly linked with hip swing. However, it is unbalanced with thigh agitation and fairly asymmetrical with arm movement, Digital Trends reported.
Dancing with both arms doing precisely the same movement appears a bit odd and robotic study co-author Dr. Nick Neave said. This is also correct if dancers are totally dissimilar dangling around frantically. The different moves between the two arms and two legs are likely linked to high-quality female dance, he added.
A high-quality male dance, on the other hand, was associated with larger and fluctuating movements of the upper body. It was a pointer of male force according to researchers from the previous male-centric study.
"One of the things we drew from that paper was that when males dance they're not necessarily signaling to females. They are instead signaling their dominance, strength, and masculinity to other males," Dr. Neave said.
In another study in 2014, researchers from University of Rochester discovered that women discern other women in red as sexual warnings. The color indicates sexual preferences to both genders. Selected colors were confirmed having a role in human mating and social interactions.