How good looks can close a deal

Women who, like Hollywood A-lister Miss Jolie, carry a flawed version of the gene struggle to make enough of the protein.

Women who, like Hollywood A-lister Miss Jolie, carry a flawed version of the gene struggle to make enough of the protein.

Published Jul 1, 2015

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London - Being beautiful doesn’t just help women find a mate – it could also give them the edge when it comes to making financial deals.

Researchers found that men are more likely to accept unfavourable monetary offers from women who are easy on the eye.

They also take more time to consider a bad offer from a good-looking woman – suggesting attractiveness itself carries value that could tip the scales in a decision.

A team from Zhejiang University in China asked 21 male students to look at 300 photos of women.

Half the images were classed as attractive, while the other half were deemed unattractive. The men then faced some of the women they had just seen while playing a game in which they had to split a small amount of money.

At the same time, the researchers studied their brain waves and noted their response times.

Their findings – published by journal Frontiers in Neuroscience – showed that men were more likely to accept bad deals from the women in the attractive group. They were also quicker to respond to fair offers from good-looking women and slower to respond to unfair offers.

The team believe the delay is due to volunteers weighing up the “value” of facial attractiveness – before adding it to the worth of the monetary offer.

They said: “The enjoyment of the perceived beauty could relieve the subjects’ dissatisfaction with an unequal money distribution.”

Meanwhile, brain scans revealed that men were more sensitive to unfair offers when the woman was plain, and felt more reward when the woman was good looking.

The researchers claim that “lookism” creates inequalities comparable to those created by racism, sexism, and family background.

Previous research has found that people of above average beauty earn around 15 percent more – while those with average looks pay a “plain penalty” in earnings.

“He’s a lot more helpful since he was hypnotised into thinking I’m Angelina Jolie.”

Daily Mail

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