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Men more 'attracted to pink female genitals than red'

Red is usually considered a seductive colour but a new study has revealed that this folk theory doesn’t hold up to the harsh light of science.

Men more 'attracted to pink female genitals than red'

Red is usually considered a seductive colour but a new study has revealed that this folk theory doesn’t hold up to the harsh light of science.

In fact, men are more attracted to pink genitals than red.

Red lips, red hearts, red negligees — there’s no doubt that red is a seductive colour. A common explanation for the sexiness of red suggests that men are attracted to the colour because it reminds them of genital arousal, much as the red swellings on female baboons' bottoms signal receptivity to male baboons.

“It’s too simplistic to basically say, ‘Oh well, our closest primate relatives have these genital swellings and therefore men are reacting to red coloring’,” said study researcher Sarah Johns, anthropologist at the University of Kent.

Instead, the appeal of red must lie elsewhere, Johns said.

If red clothing or lipstick acts as a proxy for genitals, it stands to reason that men would prefer redder vulvas on women, Johns said. But no one had ever tested whether they actually do. So she and her colleagues decided to find out.

The researchers first needed some similar, non-pornographic pictures of female genitals, a task that was “quite difficult,” Johns said.

Finally, they found a website set up so that women could anonymously submit photographs of their vulvas as part of a project meant to educate women on the diversity of genitals and improve self-esteem.

The researchers picked four similarly angled photos and retouched each of them into pale pink, light pink, dark pink and red.

“We were really careful to make sure that the re-coloring looked natural,” Johns said.

The researchers then asked 40 heterosexual men to look at all 16 images in random order and rank them on a 0-to-100 scale of attractiveness. The results showed that instead of preferring red, the men actually showed the least preference for red vulvas.

“It basically showed that there was no different between the three pinkish shades, but the reddish shade was ranked significantly less attractive,” Johns said.

The red used wasn’t bright enough to mimic a sexually transmitted infection, Johns said, but it’s possible the shade still brought to mind inflammation.

Still, the fact remains that red has been shown to be an eye-catching, “dominant” shade, especially in competitive situations. Why remains an open question, Johns said.

“Certainly the effect of red is there, but taking this kind of sexual signal out of the equation means we actually can explore why this is the case,” she added.

The study has been published in the journal PLoS ONE.

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