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#more#women#men#hair#clothing#wonder#study#observed#tend#body

Discussion (8 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

recursivecaveat7 minutes ago
I wonder if spreading breadcrumbs is a more popular hobby among men than women?
kaikaiabout 3 hours ago
I wonder if this is due to relative vigilance of men and women. This study observed that women tend to scan their environment much more than men: https://news.byu.edu/intellect/study-visually-captures-hard-...

I’ve observed that animals are pretty good at reading body language and can tell when they’re actually being seen by, rather than just sharing space with, a human.

apothegmabout 1 hour ago
Birds also tend to be reactive to forward facing pairs of eyes (because raptors, especially owls), so that would make sense.

Beyond that, women are on average more likely to wear clothing or hair that flaps around. Or heels that make loud noises when they walk.

nephihahaabout 3 hours ago
I'm wondering if there is some other variable in here. Is it clothing or hair length? Would men with long hair be more intimidating than women with short hair for example? How about certain types of clothing or footwear. Very odd.

The seagulls near me can recognise school children. They know they are more likely to pick up dropped food.

Ruryabout 3 hours ago
They did control for obvious appearance differences (e.g. color & type of clothing, hair length) and morphology (e.g. height/body size), even people's approach. But not more subtle traits such as gait, waist-hip ratio, odor...

One hypothesis suggested that in early history, women may have more commonly caught smaller prey (birds) than men did, and this fear could be evolutionarily ingrained.

adampunkabout 2 hours ago
It’s cats lol.
lobito25about 4 hours ago
They know...
postflopclarityabout 3 hours ago
do they? if there's some insinuation here I'm not understanding it.