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Deleting my account
If you want to contact me for some reason, my discord is "anoright" and I'm still in Nikos and the Slop World discord.
@HeightPilledum @LampPostPrime @Xangsane @klip11 @Antonio7 @mrriceguy @Iasacrko @flippasav @J5F0O1VJe00 @Arborist @juste @_MVP_ @slayer69 @Ellipsis @ranierean @GilfHunter @Viperm @Zer0/∞ @ArcticStorm @zv1212
Last thing I'm posting before I delete:
If you want to contact me for some reason, my discord is "anoright" and I'm still in Nikos and the Slop World discord.
@HeightPilledum @LampPostPrime @Xangsane @klip11 @Antonio7 @mrriceguy @Iasacrko @flippasav @J5F0O1VJe00 @Arborist @juste @_MVP_ @slayer69 @Ellipsis @ranierean @GilfHunter @Viperm @Zer0/∞ @ArcticStorm @zv1212
Last thing I'm posting before I delete:
High facial contrast is a feminizing trait :
https://www.researchgate.net/figure...ears-male-while-the-face-on-the_fig4_26883022
"The face on the left appears male, while the face on the right appears female. Both images were produced by making slight alterations to the same original image. The eyes and lips were lightened to produce the left image, and darkened to produce the right image. The rest of the face was unaltered, and hence equally dark in both images.
That decreasing or increasing facial contrast is sufficient to make a face appear male or female indicates that facial contrast plays a role in the perception of facial gender."
(Ignore image and title, it's clickbait. The point is lower facial contrast looks more masc)
"The paper details that she was instructed to: "Increase skin homogeneity, decrease facial contrast, and accentuate the bone structure without it being too obvious that the targets were wearing makeup."
"Previous studies have found that lower facial contrast makes faces appear more masculine," the study noted
Men proved to have more red in their faces and women have more green, contrary to prior assumptions.
“If it is on the more red end of the spectrum (the face) had a higher probability of being male. Conversely, if it is on the green end of the spectrum (the face) had a higher probability of being female,” Tarr said.
Redness enhances perceived aggression, dominance and attractiveness in men's faces
Facial Redness Increases Men's Perceived Healthiness and Attractiveness
(^ NW Euros have the reddest skin/undertones)
"Quantitative measures of skin, hair, and eye pigmentation were obtained for 470 individuals recruited in Ireland, Poland, Italy, and Portugal and included in a two-stage genetic association study of pigmentary phenotypes.
Males (M) have consistently lighter pigmentation (lower scored) than females (F) in all four countries."
"The study included 384 genetic variants and six physical characteristics. The results show that, with the same genetic variability, men tend to have lighter skin pigmentation and a worse response to the effects of ultraviolet rays," Martínez-Cadenas tells us.
"in England there is the tendency of the women to have darker hair and eyes than the men, and the women tend to darken in complexion at the time of puberty. These rules seem to apply throughout Northwestern Europe."
"Certain differences, how- ever, are clearly brought out; the conclusion of those who have argued that women are darker than men is here definitely confirmed"
Northwestern European men react worse to the sun than Northwestern European women do:
View attachment 2321390
(Volume 39 Number 12 December 2007 Nature Genetics)
Female hormones make you darker:
View attachment 2321391
"Composite faces of the (a) 10 women with highest and (b) 10 with lowest levels of late follicular oestrogen metabolite (oestrone-3-glucuronide, E1G)."
https://faseb.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1096/fj.06-6649rev
"During pregnancy (especially in the third trimester), elevated levels of estrogen, progesterone, and MSH have often been found in association with melasma"
"The association between pregnancy and altered cutaneous pigmentation has been documented for over two millennia, suggesting that sex hormones play a role in regulating epidermal melanocyte (MC) homeostasis. Here we show that physiologic estrogen (17β-estradiol) and progesterone reciprocally regulate melanin synthesis"
There is also some evidence that fluctuations of these hormones during the menstrual cycle may effect epidermal pigmentation in some women. In one study, 62% of women consistently noticed darkening of the peri-ocular skin towards the end of their menstrual cycle immediately prior to menstruation (141). There have also been reports of estrogen-containing oral contraceptives causing hyperpigmentation of the face in 8–29% of women (142). The use of dermal ointments containing estrogens has also resulted in the intense pigmentation of the genitals, mammary areola and linea alba of the abdomen in both male and female infants ranging from 4 months to 2 years (107).
Oestrogen also stimulates melanogenesis, along with thyroxine and melanocyte-stimulating hormone, and this can result in premenstrual hyperpigmentation. The effects of oestrogen on pigmentation were first inferred from changes in pigmentation observed during pregnancy, including patches of increased pigmentation on the face, and darkening of the skin of the areolae, the perineum, and the skin over the linea alba, which fades shortly after delivery. Hyperpigmentation is also observed in some women using oral contraceptives. Oestrogens induce salt and water retention, causing oedema of the hands and feet, which is a feature of premenstrual syndrome."
"progesterone or estradiol in pg doses was effective in darkening the skin."
"When comparing similar eye colour genetic profiles, females tend, as a whole, to have darker eyes than males (and, conversely, males lighter than females).
These results are also corroborated by the revision and meta-analysis of data from previously published eye colour genetic studies in several Caucasian populations, which significantly support the fact that males are more likely to have blue eyes than females, while females tend to show higher frequencies of green and brown eyes than males.
This significant gender difference would suggest that there is an as yet unidentified gender-related factor contributing to human eye colour variation."
-------------------------------------------
Iranian men have higher rates of blue eyes than Iranian women
Northwestern European men have higher rates of blue eyes than Northwestern European women
(Volume 39 Number 12 December 2007 Nature Genetics)
"The prevalence of blue eye colour was found to be significantly higher in males (58.1 %) than in females (48.2 %)"
The conditional distribution of eye color is different for the Blue and Green eye colors, with differences of around six percentage points. A larger percentage of Males report Blue eyes (39.06% to 33.42%) and a larger percentage of Females report Green eyes (17.89% to 11.97%)."
-------------------------------------------
NFL quaterbacks are extremely blue eyed:
As important to an NFL quarterback as arm strength or height, speed or intelligence, is the one characteristic that is largely ignored by the sporting community. A quarterback must have blue eyes.
Intrigued, I did a little research with the help of Google and NFL.com, and it turns out that over 80% of Superbowls have been won by Quarterback with blue eyes, a ratio of over 4 to 1. What’s more, of the twenty-three modern era quarterbacks in the NFL Hall of Fame, twenty-one have light colored eyes. That is not a misprint. That is over 90%. If you were to include guaranteed first ballot HOFer’s Peyton Manning, Bret Favre and Tom Brady, it climbs to an astounding twenty four of twenty six. (In 2014, no quarterbacks were voted as HOF semifinalist; however, of the six quarterbacks eligible, only sky blue-eyed Phil Simms has won a Superbowl, setting a record for completion percentage in the game and winning the Superbowl MVP award).
Only two Hall of Fame quarterbacks have brown eyes, Warren Moon and Otto Graham. For any coach in the NFL (or vegas bookie), this should be a stunning revelation. According to a New York Times article by Douglas Belkin, blue eyes make up less than twenty percent of the people born in the U.S. today, about 1 in 6. Even when you concede the fact that racism played a large part in the earlier days of the NFL (and some would say even now), and therefore use only statics from the population of Caucasian Americans for comparison, blue eyes are still only found at a rate of approximately 34%, or 1 in 3. Only in Estonia and some Scandinavian countries does the percentage of blue eyes even approach that of the NFL Hall of Fame’s 90+%.
Suffice it to say, there seems to be a testable, physiological, statistically supported difference between light and dark colored eyes, which apparently tends to have a profound effect on the performance of an NFL quarterback
-------------------------------------------
Over 90% of U.S. Presidents have been blue eyed:
Micheal Medved notes today that Washington's blue eyes were the rule rather than the exception in the Oval Office: 39 out of our 43 presidents had blue eyes.
It turns out that in all of U.S. history, only five presidents had brown eyes – John Quincy Adams, Andrew Johnson, Chester A. Arthur, LBJ and Nixon. All the rest were clearly described with blue, grey, or hazel eyes.
Blue eyes are a recessive genetic trait, found in only 16 percent of the U.S. population today. Granted, in 1900, roughly 50 percent of Americans had blue eyes, but that still doesn't approach the 88 percent of U.S. presidents with blue eyes.
And as for those few presidents with brown eyes,
two of our three presidents who faced serious impeachment proceedings (Andrew Johnson and Richard Nixon) were among our brown-eyed minority. The other three brownies (John Quincy Adams, Chester A. Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson) all hoped to win an additional term as president but failed to do, falling victim to bitter political critics and rivals.
-
The "study" that has been posted here numerous times about blue eyes being the most attractive attractive eye colour on women and hazel being the most attractive eye colour on men is fake, the "study" actually say the opposite:
If you want to read arguements against this and my responses, read this thread in entirety:
https://www.researchgate.net/figure...ears-male-while-the-face-on-the_fig4_26883022
"The face on the left appears male, while the face on the right appears female. Both images were produced by making slight alterations to the same original image. The eyes and lips were lightened to produce the left image, and darkened to produce the right image. The rest of the face was unaltered, and hence equally dark in both images.
That decreasing or increasing facial contrast is sufficient to make a face appear male or female indicates that facial contrast plays a role in the perception of facial gender."
(Ignore image and title, it's clickbait. The point is lower facial contrast looks more masc)
Men look more masculine when they wear make up, study shows
The study outlines that make up can increase attractiveness in men
www.unilad.com
"The paper details that she was instructed to: "Increase skin homogeneity, decrease facial contrast, and accentuate the bone structure without it being too obvious that the targets were wearing makeup."
"Previous studies have found that lower facial contrast makes faces appear more masculine," the study noted
Men proved to have more red in their faces and women have more green, contrary to prior assumptions.
“If it is on the more red end of the spectrum (the face) had a higher probability of being male. Conversely, if it is on the green end of the spectrum (the face) had a higher probability of being female,” Tarr said.
Men Are Red, Women Are Green, Brown Researcher Finds
Michael J. Tarr, professor of cognitive and linguistic sciences at Brown University, has discovered a difference in skin tone associated with gender. His paper, “Gender Recognition of Human Faces Using Color,” is to be published online this week in the journal Psychological Science. It may have...
news.brown.edu
Redness enhances perceived aggression, dominance and attractiveness in men's faces
Redness enhances perceived aggression, dominance and attractiveness in men's faces - PubMed
In a range of non-human primate, bird and fish species, the intensity of red coloration in males is associated with social dominance, testosterone levels and mate selection. In humans too, skin redness is associated with health, but it is not known whether--as in non-human species--it is also...
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Facial Redness Increases Men's Perceived Healthiness and Attractiveness
Facial Redness Increases Men's Perceived Healthiness and Attractiveness - PubMed
Past research has shown that peripheral and facial redness influences perceptions of attractiveness for men viewing women. The current research investigated whether a parallel effect is present when women rate men with varying facial redness. In four experiments, women judged the attractiveness...
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
(^ NW Euros have the reddest skin/undertones)
Genome-Wide Association Studies of Quantitatively Measured Skin, Hair, and Eye Pigmentation in Four European Populations
Pigmentation of the skin, hair, and eyes varies both within and between human populations. Identifying the genes and alleles underlying this variation has been the goal of many candidate gene and several genome-wide association studies (GWAS). Most GWAS for pigmentary traits to date have been...
journals.plos.org
"Quantitative measures of skin, hair, and eye pigmentation were obtained for 470 individuals recruited in Ireland, Poland, Italy, and Portugal and included in a two-stage genetic association study of pigmentary phenotypes.
Males (M) have consistently lighter pigmentation (lower scored) than females (F) in all four countries."
Researchers discover genetic causes of higher melanoma risk in men
A new study has identified one of the genetic causes underlying the higher rate of melanoma in men. The research group focused their study on the differences between men and women in terms of pigmentation (eye, hair and skin) and sun response, i.e. history of sunburn, and the presence irregular...
www.sciencedaily.com
"The study included 384 genetic variants and six physical characteristics. The results show that, with the same genetic variability, men tend to have lighter skin pigmentation and a worse response to the effects of ultraviolet rays," Martínez-Cadenas tells us.
"in England there is the tendency of the women to have darker hair and eyes than the men, and the women tend to darken in complexion at the time of puberty. These rules seem to apply throughout Northwestern Europe."
"Certain differences, how- ever, are clearly brought out; the conclusion of those who have argued that women are darker than men is here definitely confirmed"
Northwestern European men react worse to the sun than Northwestern European women do:
View attachment 2321390
(Volume 39 Number 12 December 2007 Nature Genetics)
Female hormones make you darker:
View attachment 2321391
"Composite faces of the (a) 10 women with highest and (b) 10 with lowest levels of late follicular oestrogen metabolite (oestrone-3-glucuronide, E1G)."
https://faseb.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1096/fj.06-6649rev
"During pregnancy (especially in the third trimester), elevated levels of estrogen, progesterone, and MSH have often been found in association with melasma"
Sex steroids regulate skin pigmentation through nonclassical membrane-bound receptors
Two receptors have been identified that can be targeted in melanocytes with selective small molecule agonists to modulate human skin color.
elifesciences.org
"The association between pregnancy and altered cutaneous pigmentation has been documented for over two millennia, suggesting that sex hormones play a role in regulating epidermal melanocyte (MC) homeostasis. Here we show that physiologic estrogen (17β-estradiol) and progesterone reciprocally regulate melanin synthesis"
Error - Cookies Turned Off
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
There is also some evidence that fluctuations of these hormones during the menstrual cycle may effect epidermal pigmentation in some women. In one study, 62% of women consistently noticed darkening of the peri-ocular skin towards the end of their menstrual cycle immediately prior to menstruation (141). There have also been reports of estrogen-containing oral contraceptives causing hyperpigmentation of the face in 8–29% of women (142). The use of dermal ointments containing estrogens has also resulted in the intense pigmentation of the genitals, mammary areola and linea alba of the abdomen in both male and female infants ranging from 4 months to 2 years (107).
Error - Cookies Turned Off
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
Oestrogen also stimulates melanogenesis, along with thyroxine and melanocyte-stimulating hormone, and this can result in premenstrual hyperpigmentation. The effects of oestrogen on pigmentation were first inferred from changes in pigmentation observed during pregnancy, including patches of increased pigmentation on the face, and darkening of the skin of the areolae, the perineum, and the skin over the linea alba, which fades shortly after delivery. Hyperpigmentation is also observed in some women using oral contraceptives. Oestrogens induce salt and water retention, causing oedema of the hands and feet, which is a feature of premenstrual syndrome."
"progesterone or estradiol in pg doses was effective in darkening the skin."
Gender is a major factor explaining discrepancies in eye colour prediction based on HERC2/OCA2 genotype and the IrisPlex model - PubMed
In recent years, several studies have greatly increased our understanding of the genetic basis underlying human eye colour variation. A large percentage of the eye colour diversity present in humans can already be genetically explained, so much so that different DNA-based eye colour prediction...
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
"When comparing similar eye colour genetic profiles, females tend, as a whole, to have darker eyes than males (and, conversely, males lighter than females).
These results are also corroborated by the revision and meta-analysis of data from previously published eye colour genetic studies in several Caucasian populations, which significantly support the fact that males are more likely to have blue eyes than females, while females tend to show higher frequencies of green and brown eyes than males.
This significant gender difference would suggest that there is an as yet unidentified gender-related factor contributing to human eye colour variation."
-------------------------------------------
Iranian men have higher rates of blue eyes than Iranian women
Northwestern European men have higher rates of blue eyes than Northwestern European women
(Volume 39 Number 12 December 2007 Nature Genetics)
"The prevalence of blue eye colour was found to be significantly higher in males (58.1 %) than in females (48.2 %)"
The conditional distribution of eye color is different for the Blue and Green eye colors, with differences of around six percentage points. A larger percentage of Males report Blue eyes (39.06% to 33.42%) and a larger percentage of Females report Green eyes (17.89% to 11.97%)."
-------------------------------------------
NFL quaterbacks are extremely blue eyed:
How Do You Like Your Blue-Eyed Boy? - The Sports Column | Sports Articles, Analysis, News and Media
*FAN SUBMISSION by Benjamin Barrett of Santa Barbara, CA.* In these days of Saber-metrics and Moneyball, where coaches turn to Spygates and players look to deer antlers for any advantage to win, it surprises me that more NFL coaches haven’t crunched one of the most obvious (at least to us...
www.thesportscol.com
As important to an NFL quarterback as arm strength or height, speed or intelligence, is the one characteristic that is largely ignored by the sporting community. A quarterback must have blue eyes.
Intrigued, I did a little research with the help of Google and NFL.com, and it turns out that over 80% of Superbowls have been won by Quarterback with blue eyes, a ratio of over 4 to 1. What’s more, of the twenty-three modern era quarterbacks in the NFL Hall of Fame, twenty-one have light colored eyes. That is not a misprint. That is over 90%. If you were to include guaranteed first ballot HOFer’s Peyton Manning, Bret Favre and Tom Brady, it climbs to an astounding twenty four of twenty six. (In 2014, no quarterbacks were voted as HOF semifinalist; however, of the six quarterbacks eligible, only sky blue-eyed Phil Simms has won a Superbowl, setting a record for completion percentage in the game and winning the Superbowl MVP award).
Only two Hall of Fame quarterbacks have brown eyes, Warren Moon and Otto Graham. For any coach in the NFL (or vegas bookie), this should be a stunning revelation. According to a New York Times article by Douglas Belkin, blue eyes make up less than twenty percent of the people born in the U.S. today, about 1 in 6. Even when you concede the fact that racism played a large part in the earlier days of the NFL (and some would say even now), and therefore use only statics from the population of Caucasian Americans for comparison, blue eyes are still only found at a rate of approximately 34%, or 1 in 3. Only in Estonia and some Scandinavian countries does the percentage of blue eyes even approach that of the NFL Hall of Fame’s 90+%.
Suffice it to say, there seems to be a testable, physiological, statistically supported difference between light and dark colored eyes, which apparently tends to have a profound effect on the performance of an NFL quarterback
-------------------------------------------
Over 90% of U.S. Presidents have been blue eyed:
The Blue-eyed Edge in the Oval Office
George Washington, whose birthday we celebrate today, was famous for his steely blue eyes. We know this thanks to the many portraits that Ch...
elephantsinthebluegrass.blogspot.com
Micheal Medved notes today that Washington's blue eyes were the rule rather than the exception in the Oval Office: 39 out of our 43 presidents had blue eyes.
It turns out that in all of U.S. history, only five presidents had brown eyes – John Quincy Adams, Andrew Johnson, Chester A. Arthur, LBJ and Nixon. All the rest were clearly described with blue, grey, or hazel eyes.
Blue eyes are a recessive genetic trait, found in only 16 percent of the U.S. population today. Granted, in 1900, roughly 50 percent of Americans had blue eyes, but that still doesn't approach the 88 percent of U.S. presidents with blue eyes.
And as for those few presidents with brown eyes,
two of our three presidents who faced serious impeachment proceedings (Andrew Johnson and Richard Nixon) were among our brown-eyed minority. The other three brownies (John Quincy Adams, Chester A. Arthur, and Lyndon Johnson) all hoped to win an additional term as president but failed to do, falling victim to bitter political critics and rivals.
-
The "study" that has been posted here numerous times about blue eyes being the most attractive attractive eye colour on women and hazel being the most attractive eye colour on men is fake, the "study" actually say the opposite:
If you want to read arguements against this and my responses, read this thread in entirety:
Just made some htb - stacylite bitch change her tinder bio
She had something like "Just text me so we go out i like this and that " and other bs, i told her you Better talk a bit before meeting a complete stranger, She replied what you mean and changed the bio with something my stile But muh muh bull your pics suck and your pheno Is deathnik
looksmax.org