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  • Anyone, or anything, that reproduces sexually

  • is constantly thinking to itself

  • "Who am I gonna mate with?"

  • We spend a lot of time thinking about mate choice

  • because passing on your genes early and often is how you win at being alive.

  • From an evolutionary standpoint,

  • it's the most important thing you will ever do, if you do it.

  • And due to its extreme importance,

  • it's also very complicated, you may have noticed.

  • Our general understanding of it comes from Charles Darwin

  • who proposed that some individuals get more action than others

  • because of sexual selection.

  • You've heard of it.

  • One gender of a species consistently prefers mates with specific traits

  • so individuals with those traits pass their genes on more often

  • and spread their genes, and the traits, throughout a population.

  • Old Charlie was certainly on to something.

  • Take a look at this peacock

  • Some would consider this overkill, but to the ladies,

  • a big frothy rack of feathers shows that a dude is healthy

  • and has good genes.

  • So, as a result of sexual selection, male peacocks

  • have evolved to look like 1970s Las Vegas showgirls.

  • Humans, like peacocks, have evolved to like some traits more than others,

  • and these preferences date back to a time when those traits

  • gave an individual huge survival advantages.

  • So in most cases, beauty is actually a language

  • that conveys information about health and fertility.

  • But if you're thinking that it's all about boobs and big muscles,

  • think harder.

  • You know what really turns us on? Bilateral symmetry.

  • Humans are attracted to people whose bodies and

  • faces look the same on both sides.

  • How am I doing? Anybody?

  • Symmetrical imbalance can mean someone was exposed to

  • some kind of stressor during early development

  • that they weren't tough enough to deal with.

  • Similarly, a low waist-to-hip ratio drives both

  • dude and lady humans wild.

  • Where fat is deposited on a body is determined by

  • sex hormones: testosterone in men and estrogen in women.

  • Women who produce the ideal amount of estrogen

  • generally have waists that are about 70% the width of their hips.

  • Same goes for men and testosterone.

  • People with this ideal ratio are often less susceptible

  • to cardiovascular disorders, cancer, diabetes, and

  • women in this range also have less difficulty conceiving and giving birth.

  • Now you might be wondering

  • why will a nice, symmetical guy with an ideal waist-hip ratio

  • make you feel kind of meh, but he's got your friend

  • driving by his house three times a day?

  • Well, one reason could be in our genes.

  • Everybody gives off subtle chemical signals called pheromones

  • which gives potential mates a clue to our genetic profiles.

  • Crazy, right?

  • Studies have shown that men and women are generally

  • attracted to pheromones of individuals that are

  • genetically similar to themselves, with one major exception.

  • They prefer mates with a different kind of

  • immune system gene called

  • Major Histocompatibility Complex, or MHC.

  • The combo of two variations of the MHC gene

  • helps a couple's offspring fight off disease better

  • and our pheromones basically tell mates

  • which version of that gene we have.

  • But even after you account for pheromones

  • and symmetry and ratios, it's complicated.

  • And people don't make rational decisions, so really

  • don't bother with those hair plugs or that boob job.

  • It's complicated.

  • And yet so awesome.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow.

  • In the comments, tell us what makes you attracted

  • to a potential mate.

  • Also if you have any questions or ideas or comments,

  • you can leave those down in the comments or get in touch with us

  • on Facebook or Twitter.

  • And if you want to continue getting smarter with us all the time,

  • you can go to youtube.com/scishow and subscribe.

Anyone, or anything, that reproduces sexually

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