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== Running == | == Running == | ||
The same rules of gait attractiveness apply to running as well. The exaggeratedly sexually dimorphic run (same technique as the walk) is most attractive from the front and back, with jogging being more attractive than a sprint, and a "averaged" or "neutral" jog or sprint being most attractive when viewed from the side. | The same rules of gait attractiveness apply to running as well. The exaggeratedly sexually dimorphic run (same technique as the walk) is most attractive from the front and back, with jogging being more attractive than a sprint, and a "averaged" or "neutral" jog or sprint being most attractive when viewed from the side. | ||
== Dancing == | |||
A study on physical strength and dance attractiveness showed a positive relationships between hand grip strength and opposite‐sex assessments of dance attractiveness for men but not women.<ref>https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ajhb.22703</ref> | |||
* A study found strong strong positive associations between symmetry and dancing ability, and these associations were stronger in men than in women. In addition, women rate dances by symmetrical men relatively more positively than do men, and more-symmetrical men value symmetry in women dancers more than do less-symmetrical men.<ref>https://www.nature.com/articles/nature04344</ref> | |||
== High status gait == | == High status gait == |