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AI Roundtable Poll · 5 models

Which body type a man find more attractive?

Result: Unanimous — A woman with big hips and butt but small breasts (5/5 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: A woman with big hips and butt but small breasts

A is the stronger choice because, in broad patterns of heterosexual male attraction, waist-to-hip ratio and overall lower-body shape are often especially salient cues of femininity and physical attractiveness. Big hips and butt with smaller breasts is also closer to many widely preferred body ideals across cultures and in current media trends. Breast size varies a lot in preference, but narrow hips and a flat butt are more likely to reduce the hourglass shape many men report liking. That said, attraction is highly individual, so no single answer fits all men. But if forced to choose the more generally likely option, A is more plausible.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: A woman with big hips and butt but small breasts

Evolutionary psychology and cross-cultural studies consistently show men prefer women with a low waist-to-hip ratio (WHR around 0.7), signaling fertility and health. Option A (big hips and butt) embodies this hourglass figure, even with smaller breasts. Option B (narrow hips, flat butt, big breasts) has a higher WHR, which is less attractive on average, as breasts alone don't signal reproductive fitness as strongly. Research by Devendra Singh (1993) confirms WHR trumps breast size in male preferences across 18 cultures. Modern data from dating apps (e.g., OKCupid analyses) reinforces hip/butt emphasis over top-heaviness.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: A woman with big hips and butt but small breasts

Research in evolutionary psychology consistently suggests that men across cultures tend to find a lower waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) highly attractive, which is associated with wider hips relative to the waist. This preference is thought to be rooted in fertility signals, as a lower WHR correlates with better reproductive health and hormonal profiles. Studies by Devendra Singh and others have demonstrated that hip and waist proportions are among the strongest predictors of female attractiveness as rated by men, often outweighing breast size in importance. A fuller hip-and-butt profile signals youth, health, and fertility more reliably than breast size alone. Additionally, contemporary cultural trends — across many societies and media — show a strong preference for curvier lower-body proportions. While breast preferences vary significantly across individuals and cultures, the preference for wider hips and a fuller butt appears to be more universal and deeply rooted. Therefore, when forced to choose between these two options, Option A — a woman with big hips and butt but small breasts — aligns more closely with what research suggests the average man would find more attractive.

DeepSeek V3.2

Vote: A woman with big hips and butt but small breasts

Evolutionary psychology suggests that men are subconsciously drawn to body features that signal fertility and health. A woman with big hips and butt often exhibits a lower waist-to-hip ratio, which is consistently linked to higher attractiveness ratings across cultures due to its association with reproductive fitness. Cultural trends, such as the celebration of curves in modern media, further reinforce this preference. While individual tastes vary, the emphasis on hip and butt size aligns with deep-seated biological cues that enhance perceived attractiveness.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: A woman with big hips and butt but small breasts

While physical attraction is highly subjective and varies widely among individuals, evolutionary psychology provides strong insights into general cross-cultural preferences. Studies consistently show that a low waist-to-hip ratio (typically around 0.7), which correlates with wider hips and a fuller butt, is a nearly universal indicator of female attractiveness. This proportion biologically signals health, youth, and reproductive viability. In contrast, preferences for breast size tend to vary significantly more across different cultures, eras, and individuals. Because the preference for a curvier lower body (larger hips and butt) is more deeply rooted in evolutionary biology and cross-cultural trends, Option A represents a body type that is statistically more likely to be found attractive by a larger demographic of men.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a rare, clinical consensus on a topic usually fraught with subjectivity, with all five models independently selecting Option A. The group relied heavily on evolutionary psychology, citing the 0.7 waist-to-hip ratio as a nearly universal biological signal of fertility that outweighs the variable importance of breast size. Grok 4.1 Fast and Claude Opus 4.6 anchored the discussion by referencing decades of cross-cultural research, effectively arguing that a woman's lower-body proportions are more salient cues of health and femininity than her bust.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: A woman with big hips and butt but small breasts: 5

Strongest Arguments

  • A woman with big hips and butt but small breasts: Evolutionary psychology and cross-cultural studies, specifically the work of Devendra Singh, consistently demonstrate that a low waist-to-hip ratio (around 0.7) is a more reliable and universal indicator of health and reproductive fitness than breast size.