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Brown-eyed women are the most intelligent and outwardly confident

A study, the results of which were published in the latest issue of the journal "PLOS ONE", showed that looking at a person's eyes can tell you whether he is trustworthy or not, and that the color of the eyes may serve as a sensor to measure the degree of each person's reliability and the degree of confidence and reassurance. This study found that people with brown eyes are more confident than those with blue eyes.

brown eyes
brown eyes
Commenting on this study, writer Kim Carolo jokingly asks, "Does this mean that people like Australian actor Hugh Jackman and American actress Sandra Bullock (brown-eyed) can be trusted more than English actor Jude Law and American actress Reese Witherspoon (blue-eyed)? Not that way, Carol replies. Eye color does not paint the full picture of how reliable a person appears.

brown eyes
"It's not about eye color, but about the shape of the face's roundness with eye color," said lead author Dr. Karel Kleisner of Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic. Together they make up the highly suggested degree of reliability.”

brown eyes
Kleisner and his colleagues recruited 200 male and female students to find out their tendency to trust about 80 young men and women by their faces, including those with brown eyes and blue eyes. The researchers, after asking all the participants in the study, recorded that the owners of brown eyes, both females and males, had greater confidence than those who looked at their faces. But the story of this study did not end here. Believing that eye color cannot be definitive about a person's trustworthiness, the researchers asked a second group of students to determine the degree of reliability of the same faces that they had shown to the previous group of participants, but after changing the eye colors of the faces of the eighty people using digital image processing technology. The result was that the faces that were considered by the first group to be the most inspiring confidence had similar reliability scores by the second group, even though the colors of these eyes were digitally changed. What made the researchers conclude that even if the color of the eyes has a role in inspiring a varying amount of confidence or reassurance, there are other factors that play an important role in this regard, such as the shape of the face.
stereotypes
One of the things that the researchers recorded was that the faces that suggested the most confidence according to the assessments of the students in the study were those that were less wide, with larger eyes, larger stomata, and upward-facing lips. Dr. Kleisner said all of these traits were more closely related to people with brown eyes.
On the other hand, the faces of blue-eyed people were smaller but longer, with sharper features and widely spaced eyebrows. Kleisner says that the preference for people with wide brown eyes at the expense of blue and colored eyes means that this has some social implications and repercussions and patterns of relationships. He adds, “Excessive viewing of a person based on the color of his eyes may lead to social stereotypes that can influence a number of social situations, whether in terms of choosing a life partner, friends or business partners, and even choosing marketing executives, promoting products and services, and advertising campaigns for political candidates.” and democratic processes. But he adds that despite the fact that blue eyes are less indicative of confidence according to this study, northern Europeans who have colored eyes in general and blue eyes in particular enjoy greater attractiveness compared to others. Perhaps the magic that blue-eyed people enjoy may motivate the belief that their owners may be more beautiful and charming, but not necessarily more loyal and trustworthy!
Kleisner believes that there is a need to conduct studies on eye color on a larger scale and using more methodologies, and warns in the conclusion of his study against the consequences of exaggerating the interpretation of the results of his study or downloading them more than they can bear, noting that he and his colleagues in the end only conveyed the impressions of groups of people About the color of the eyes. He concludes jokingly, "Avoid staring and looking deeply into each person's eye to see what color it is, as this may bother him and you."

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