Sound of Voice May
Predict Sexual Behavior
New research findings suggest that the
sound of a person's voice may predict his or her level of sexual
activity.
Men and women whose voices were
given higher ratings in attractiveness reported having more sex
partners and were younger at first intercourse than those whose
voices were considered less attractive.
"Thus, the sound of an individual's
voice can reveal important information to potential mates," study
author Dr. Susan M. Hughes of Vassar College in Poughkeepsie,
New York told Reuters Health.
In the study, 149 men and women
listened to recorded voices of anonymous individuals and rated
the voices on a five-point scale, from "very unattractive" to
"very attractive." On average, six men and six women rated each
voice. Study participants also underwent measurements of their
shoulders, waists and hips and some anonymously reported various
details about their sexual history.
When the researchers compared voice
ratings with sexual histories, they found that men and women whose
voices were considered more attractive by opposite sex raters
reported younger ages at first sexual intercourse, more sex partners
and more sexual affairs than did those with less attractive voices.
Voice attractiveness predicted
promiscuity in women better than did their waist-to-hip ratio,
Hughes and her colleagues report in the September issue of Evolution
and Human Behavior. Among men, however, the shoulder-to-hip ratio
was a better predictor of promiscuity.
That said, not all women with attractive
voices are promiscuous, but "promiscuous females tend to have
more attractive voices," co-author Dr. Gordon G. Gallup Jr., of
the University at Albany, State University of New York, stated.
Women with the most attractive
voices, according to opposite sex raters, tended to have smaller
waists relative to their hips, whereas men whose voices were rated
as more attractive -- regardless of the sex of the rater -- tended
to have broader shoulders and narrower hips.
"Voice is shaped and modified by
certain hormones, such as testosterone, and these same hormones
also play a role in influencing both sexual drive as well as the
sex-specific changes in body shape that occur during puberty,"
Hughes said. "Therefore, the link between voice, body configuration,
and sexual behavior may be due to similar hormonal influences,
attractiveness promoting sexual opportunity, or both."
During human evolutionary history,
voice may have also played a role in how men and women made reproductive-related
decisions, particularly at nighttime, the report indicates.
"The sound of a person's voice
could have become an important indicator of other biologically
relevant information," Gallup Jr. said.
Other researchers have reported
an association between facial attractiveness and sperm quality
in men and facial attractiveness and longevity in men and women.
That is, men who were judged to be more attractive tended to have
a higher number of sperm and more mobile sperm than their less
attractive peers. The most attractive men and women were also
found to live longer than those considered less attractive.
Thus, the authors write, "voice
attractiveness may be an indicator (albeit indirect) of other
fitness-related features as well."
As men and women search for Mr.
or Ms. Right, the current findings suggest that people should
not "combine a 'blind' date with a 'deaf' date," Gallup said.
"Given the importance of voice
as a dimension along which important features may vary," he said,
men and women should not agree to a blind date without first having
at least one telephone conversation.
SOURCE: Evolution and Human Behavior,
September 2004.
Reference
Source 89
September 28, 2004
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