Hugh Grant and Martine McCutcheon starring in film Love Actually.
It’s not men who spend their time secretly ogling women - it’s women, according to a revealing new study.
And it is the fairer sex that gives their rivals’ bodies a good visual once-over, found Bristol University researchers, rather than their supposedly Neanderthal partners. Men are more likely to concentrate on a potential mate’s face.
The academics came to their conclusions after asking volunteers to examine a range of different images, includingstills from nature documentaries, classical and surrealist paintings, and freeze-frames of couples in films.
The last category included one of the final scenes from Love Actually, starring Hugh Grant and Martine McCutcheon, where the pair appear on a school stage together. Grant plays a fictional prime minister who becomes besotted with a maid at Number 10, and the couple end up kissing on stage at the end of a nativity play.
Another scene was from the 1961 classic Breakfast at Tiffany’s, in which Audrey Hepburn’s tightly-wound character Holly Golightly tussles over a table lamp with her tenant Paul Varjak, played by George Peppard.
The researchers found women weren’t interested in looking at Grant or Peppard: it was McCutcheon and Hepburn they focused on.
They spent 61 percent of their time looking at the women in the pictures, and only 39 percent on the men.
【研究发现:女人更爱偷瞄女人】相关文章:
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