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Is the moral of this story that ugly people shouldn't breed?

N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
A new study from our Canadian pals....


Cute kids get more attention from parents: study
CTV | 15 March 2004 | News Staff

Not-so-cute children are more likely to be neglected by their parents -- at least that's what a researcher from the University of Alberta has found.

Andrew Herrell's original intention was to study safety in grocery stores, where children often suffer minor injuries. But the more he observed parents with youngsters in shopping carts, the more he noticed a pattern developing.

Herrell is the director of the population research lab in the university's sociology department. He and his study team found cute kids were more likely to be buckled into their grocery cart seat.

They also were kept closer to their parents and not allowed to wander more than three metres away.

Herrell and his team followed parents of children (between two and five years old) around 14 local supermarkets for 10 minutes each, and rated their looks on a scale of one to 10.

Herrell found that only 1.2 per cent of the least attractive kids were buckled into their cart seats, compared with 13.3 per cent of the most attractive kids.

Not-so-cute kids were also allowed to wander away more often than their cute cohorts.

He says most parents would be stunned by his findings and would also heartily deny them. But he adds that after conducting 426 observations, he has noticed a pattern.

"More attractive children were more likely hovered over and for the parent to keep some close contact with that attractive child," Herrell told CTV News. "What I think it means is in our society, attractiveness is an asset."

Herrell believes that parents are unwittingly acting out patterns of evolution seen throughout the animal world.

Humans have evolved to give the most attention to their children who are most likely to survive in our world and therefore to pass on genetic material.

Herrell says parents of ugly children are not any more likely to abuse their children; they are simply unaware that they are neglecting their children more than parents of other children do.

Aidan Kelly, a father of three in Edmonton, says he can't believe a child's looks could ever make a difference in how he or she is cared for.

"For someone to treat someone different because of their looks . . . I don't see how a parent could do that," he told CTV's Edmonton affiliate, CFRN News.

Harrell's findings didn't surprise Maryanne Fisher, a professor of psychology at Halifax's St. Mary's University, who says, "An unattractive person might not have the best genes, so you'd spend more time and effort to look after the people with good genes."

Great-grandfather Bill McConnell says there may be some truth to the controversial study's findings.

"We haven't had little kids for a long time," he said, "but I think if you visit families with kids, the cutest ones get all the attention.
 

Changleen

Paranoid Member
Jan 9, 2004
14,910
2,876
Pōneke
Yeah I've read stuff like this before. It apparantly comes down to facial symettry. The human brain responds to symettry very strongly. If you have a highly symetrical face, provided your features are in proportion, you are likely to be considered 'pretty' - essentially genetically preferable.
 

N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
***This just in....!!!!!!***

:eek:

Top Canadian scientists deduce attractive women get asked out on dates more often than ugly women do...
 

Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
56,406
22,488
Sleazattle
N8 said:
***This just in....!!!!!!***

:eek:

Top Canadian scientists deduce attractive women get asked out on dates more than ugly women do...
Yes but ugly women are more likely asked to get out.
 

$tinkle

Expert on blowing
Feb 12, 2003
14,591
6
fluff said:
I had to read that more than twice.. :)

Probably more likely to come out too.
so it's not just me who sees this
whew!

how do you explain all the cute gay guys? (not talking about bears, obviously)

if anyone thinks i'm projecting, have you seen melissa etheridge lately?