Apr
14
2009
0

Females’ Attractiveness Ratings Change over Menstrual Cycle

DeBruine (2005) writes that females prefer relatively resembling faces

Two lines of reasoning predict that women’s preferences for people exhibiting cues to kinship will be lower in the follicular phase than in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. Women may avoid kinship cues during the follicular phase when they are most fertile due to the costs of inbreeding. Alternatively, women may seek kinship cues during the luteal phase as a byproduct of the benefits of associating with kin during pregnancy, which is also characterized by high progesterone. We find that preferences for facial resemblance, a putative kinship cue, follow this predicted pattern and are positively correlated with estimated progesterone levels based on cycle day. Neither estimated estrogen levels nor conception risk predicted preferences for self-resemblance, and the cyclic shift was stronger for preferences for female faces than male faces. These findings lead to the possibility that this cyclic change in preference for self-resemblance may be a byproduct of a hormonal mechanism for increasing affiliative behavior toward kin during pregnancy rather than a mechanism for preventing inbreeding during fertile periods.

Source: http://www.socialbehavior.uzh.ch/teaching/semsocialneurosciencews07/DeBruine_2005_hormone_behav_self.pdf

Written by Elliott in: Uncategorized |
Apr
14
2009
0

“Today’s Police Warrior”

Those individuals who never stopped playing cops and robbers will be happy to know that their bible, “Defense Tactics: Modern Arrest & Control Techniques for Today’s Police Warrior,” is a bestseller on Amazon.com. I’ll let the book speak for itself:

Whether you re a law enforcement officer wanting to improve your edge or a martial artist wanting to expand your knowledge of street proven techniques, you will find Defensive Tactics: Modern Arrest and Control Techniques for Today’s Police Warrior is filled with invaluable information including:

* Hitting with the hands, feet, forearms and elbows. . .
* Blocking an assailant’s strikes
* Using vulnerable points to gain compliance
* Head disorientation. . .
* Arresting big guys. . .

Written by a retired cop and high-ranking martial artist who survived all that the mean streets threw at him while working patrol, gang enforcement and dignitary protection, Defensive Tactics goes beyond what is taught in the academy, officer’s in-service training, and what is allowed by the administration. BONUS: Includes a chapter on proven ways to control a suspect on the ground written by LAPD officer Mark Mireles, an MMA coach, police academy trainer, and wrestling champ.

About the Author
Loren Christensen was still a rookie on probation when his police agency recruited him to teach defensive tactics to new officers hired just a few months after him. . . He borrows from these disciplines as well as other fighting arts to show you how to make your restraint, control and self-defense tactics more effective, more painful, safer for you and safer for the suspect.

Tell me if I’m wrong, but making your attacks both “more painful” and “safer for the suspect” seems to be at odds. In any case, I wouldn’t want the cop on my block to see himself as “Today’s Police Warrior.”

Written by Elliott in: Uncategorized |

Powered by WordPress | Aeros Theme | TheBuckmaker.com WordPress Themes