Dude looks like a lady: Men with feminine faces more likely to be a hit with women



Men with feminine faces will be luckier in love as more women are attracted to them than masculine men, according to a new study.



Most women prefer men with more feminine shaped faces and darker skin, according to research by psychologists at New York and Princeton universities.



But the investigation found that men typically also want women’s faces to be feminine with plump lips and wide eyes.



Dude looks like a lady: The study found that women are attracted to men with feminine faces, such as Steven Tyler who is famed for his pouty and full lips



Wide eyes and plump lips: American footballer Tom Brady and Orlando Bloom



Two groups of men and women were shown a selection of thousands of computer-generated faces of the opposite sex to rate, which had been manipulated to look either more masculine or feminine.

The computer model tested 50 dimensions of facial features, including nose size, plumpness of lips and facial colouring.

The scientists found that more men want women’s faces to have a feminine shape, while women want men’s faces to have a feminine shape, but darker skin.

Hit with the ladies: Rockers David Bowie and Mick Jagger in their younger days



Hot boys: Film stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Zac Efron



The findings show that male and female attractiveness are not equal and opposite, according to the researchers.



The authors of the study, which will be published by the Psychological Science journal, also found that the appeal of average faces is less straightforward than previously thought.

Psychologists Christopher Said and Alexander Todorov, who carried out the research, said that attractiveness is more complex than had been found by previous studies.

Feminine? Actor Jude Law and soccer player David Beckham



While both men and women find average faces attractive, the most average faces are not considered the most attractive.



Christopher Said of New York University said: ‘This paper helps sort out the uncertainty about whether masculinity is attractive or not in male faces.’



