Deep male voice may not attract women: study
Reseachers found sexual dimorphism of vocal pitch - how different the two sexes were - was greater in humans than in any other ape species.
Washington: Male voices are not deeply pitched in order to attract female mates, but instead serve to intimidate competition, according to a new study which studied a wide variety of primates including humans.
"We wanted to determine if sexual selection had produced sex differences in humans and closely related species," said David A Puts from Pennsylvania State University in the US. Researchers conducted three studies and found that a
deep-pitched male voice was seen as dominant by other males, but had a smaller impact on attracting females.
They also found that the sexual dimorphism of vocal pitch - how different the two sexes were - was greater in humans than in any other ape species measured in their study. "We find that masculine traits in humans are not the same as, say, in peacocks where the beautiful tail attracts a mate," said Puts. Human male traits imply physical aggression and formidability and seem to provide competitive advantages in fighting or threatening other men more than they help attract women, researchers said.
They first looked at the fundamental frequency of male voices across the anthropoid primates - those most closely related to humans, including gorillas, chimpanzees and orangutans. Fundamental frequency is the average rate of vocal-fold vibrations. They used 1,721 vocal calls, free of background noise, from individuals of known species, sex and adult status.
They used mating systems - monogamous, promiscuous or polygynous - as a proxy for the intensity of sexual selection. Researchers found that the differences in fundamental frequency between sexes decreased towards monogamy and increased towards polygyny. Next, they looked at 258 female and 175 male college students who read a standard passage that was recorded without any background sounds. Then 558 women and 568 men rated the recordings.
Each female recording was rated by 15 men for the potential for short- and long-term romantic attractiveness using a standard rating system. Each male recording was rated by 15 men for dominance and 15 women for short- and long-term romantic attractiveness. The researchers found that fundamental frequency predicted men's perceived dominance over other men, and to a
lesser degree their attractiveness to women, but that it did not predict women's attractiveness to men for either short- or long-term romantic relationships.
The researchers then recorded 53 women and groups of 62 and 58 men and tested their saliva for cortisol and testosterone. In women, there was no connection between vocal pitch and either cortisol or testosterone. "For both groups of men, high testosterone levels and low cortisol levels occurred in men with low fundamental vocal frequency," said Puts.
This is a pattern that has been shown to predict male dominance, attractiveness and immune function, he said. The findings were published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.