Ok. I was right. I can off on it now. It was a sample of 156 UCA female students. They rated themselves on an attractive scale and had others rate them as well. They then rated how they handled conflict on an anger to passive scale. Then they rated themselves on some scale (they didn't go into detail here on an entitlement scale (what they deserved in life) Seems the the blue eyed blondes had the highest degree of attraction on the self rate scale and it coorelated to the group rate scale. So every agreed that the blondes were more attractive. And then blue-eye blonds told the researches they handled conflict usually with getting "mad". Ergo, blondes get angry, therefore Attractive girls are more likely to get angry. The blonds also told the researchers they felt they were entitled to more stuff. Therefore, blonds are more likely have high expections of what they deserve, so if blonds have those expectations and blondes are more attractive that the others (them ugly ones), then attractive women are more likely to get angy and have higher expections of what they deserve.
I consider myself a fairly attractive red head and I have a very high expectation of what I deserve. It it simply because I have a high IQ and a high work ethic. I earn what I get and I don't expect anything to be handed to me. I certainly am not going to let 156 female students and a poorly designed study and a bad decision to publish in a BBC News page go unnoted even if no one reads this. I'm republishing in my journal.
Thank you Andy for bringing the link. It's news reporting like this that we see all the time and taints the minds of people because they belief the soundbites and they don't questions what they read. It is infurating.
It does match my experiences that pretty females are more likely to get what they want when younger, and develop a sense of entitlement. I wouldn't blame it on any kind of evolutionary reason though - pure socialisation would lead to it.
It may match experiences, but it still should not be publish as a study without real data to back it up. And I mean a good baseline, a good sample of women, and a solid measuring system. It just pushes my buttons. I agree that a lot of women probably do have that and also believe a lot of men do too, especially young. The football players/cheerleade sterotypes. We've all seen that. And we see today in TV and in magazines and the fashion industry and what people expect people to look like. The whle body image thing. And I agree with you - I don't think the evolutionary thing plays as big of a role as the environment does and society and the behaviors that you are or aren't allowed to use to get what you need. I had to earn what I got. And a lot of girls didn't. A lot guys didn't and lot of them did. I think the pendulum swings both ways. I would be very interested in seeing a REAL study on both sexes here. It very well may be true. I am more upset at the process of the study than the idea of it being false on the outcome. If it had been conducted well & this was the outcome, I wouldn't have a problem with it. Does that make sense. I just don't like it when researches take these small pockets of people and generalize a whole sterotype of "people" from it. No matter who it is. I hope that makes sense.
Just the link you have. And it is a rather LARGE sample size (we don't know the true sample min/max because don't know the population of females of UCA in their study, it could be 15 - 50), but the results would only be valid if the women chosen were random women of UCA (we don't know that), the measurement system used to compare was unbiased (we don't that either) and the results published could only be referenced to the UCA women. If all the above were true, then the results in article should have read: Pretty women in UCA get angier easier than brunettes and redhead women in UCA. You can't take a sample set from a population as small as that and generalize to a worldwide population. You simple don't have enough knowledge of the variables. They did here, they were all students, about the same age, same housing conditions, same stress level, so not much difference in what could be affecting them outside of the "norm". But if you take women my age, with different variables, then you introduce sooo much more to it, you can't apply it. You can the test the coorelation against other universities with the same set same of variables that may apply, but you couldn't broaden it, the data wouldn't be theh same.
And in the whole scheme of doing this - "pretty" would have an definition based how they measured "pretty". Anger would have definition of they measured anger. And also blond, brunette and redhead would have definitions BEFORE it started. Thats where that unbiased measurement system would come into play. It would be easy for me to put a strawberry blond in blond category and for you to put her in a redhead cat. Or a dark blond in a brunette vs blond. Real easy.
I'm only saying this, because this is what I do. I'm a statistical process control engineer, and a master black belt in lean six sigma. So this whole thing just gets me going. I'm sorry. We don't have to debate it all night Andy. It's a silly article. I just riled up. I do this sometimes when i see polls. its a curse. I bet you do it when you see bad code. :)
I see what you mean about broadening it to a wider range of people.
But I don't think you need a better definition of pretty - people (largely) know whether they're viewed as pretty, and it's that which is most likely going to affect whether they develop a sense of entitlement or not. The fact that hair colour correlated with perceived beauty isn't that surprising, but I don't think that it matters particularly.
no subject
Date: 2010-01-19 05:28 pm (UTC)This makes sense to me. As an ugly duckling myself I marvel at how people bend over backwards for my very pretty friends.
no subject
Date: 2010-01-20 07:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-01-20 08:09 am (UTC)I consider myself a fairly attractive red head and I have a very high expectation of what I deserve. It it simply because I have a high IQ and a high work ethic. I earn what I get and I don't expect anything to be handed to me. I certainly am not going to let 156 female students and a poorly designed study and a bad decision to publish in a BBC News page go unnoted even if no one reads this. I'm republishing in my journal.
Thank you Andy for bringing the link. It's news reporting like this that we see all the time and taints the minds of people because they belief the soundbites and they don't questions what they read. It is infurating.
no subject
Date: 2010-01-20 08:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-01-20 08:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-01-20 08:29 am (UTC)Do you have a link to the study details?
no subject
Date: 2010-01-20 08:49 am (UTC)And in the whole scheme of doing this - "pretty" would have an definition based how they measured "pretty". Anger would have definition of they measured anger. And also blond, brunette and redhead would have definitions BEFORE it started. Thats where that unbiased measurement system would come into play. It would be easy for me to put a strawberry blond in blond category and for you to put her in a redhead cat. Or a dark blond in a brunette vs blond. Real easy.
I'm only saying this, because this is what I do. I'm a statistical process control engineer, and a master black belt in lean six sigma. So this whole thing just gets me going. I'm sorry. We don't have to debate it all night Andy. It's a silly article. I just riled up. I do this sometimes when i see polls. its a curse. I bet you do it when you see bad code. :)
no subject
Date: 2010-01-20 08:54 am (UTC)But I don't think you need a better definition of pretty - people (largely) know whether they're viewed as pretty, and it's that which is most likely going to affect whether they develop a sense of entitlement or not. The fact that hair colour correlated with perceived beauty isn't that surprising, but I don't think that it matters particularly.
no subject
Date: 2010-01-20 08:18 am (UTC)"This is a small study on a very limited sample group so it is not possible to generalise."
But they did generalise as the bold title of the report was
Pretty women 'anger more easily'