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Height preferences in humans may not be universal: Evidence from the Datoga people of Tanzania
Authors:P Sorokowski  ML Butovskaya
Institution:1. Institute of Psychology, University of Wroclaw, Dawida, 1, 50-527 Wroclaw, Poland;2. Department of Cross-Cultural Psychology and Human Ethology, Insitute of Ethnology and Anthropology, Russian Academy of Science, Leninsky Prosp 32a, 117334 Moscow, Russia
Abstract:Many studies in Western societies have shown that women prefer relatively taller men as potential partners, whereas men prefer women who are slightly shorter than themselves. Here, we discuss possible limitations of previous results within the context of the stimuli used (i.e., differences in the perceived body size of female silhouettes). Our results show that, at least in a Polish sample (N = 231), modified stimuli did not essentially change the observed male-taller preferences. In contrast, we report height preferences in a traditional ethnic group, the Datoga people from Tanzania (N = 107), in which men and women preferred extreme sexual dimorphism in stature (SDS) sets (i.e., men and women chose women much taller or much shorter than themselves). Thus, our data do not accord with the suggestion of a universal preference for taller men, but rather suggests that height preferences may be influenced by cultural, environmental, and ecological conditions.
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