10 Feb 2012

Creativity of man facing infertile women

Women who are entering the brain can affect male fertility. The man who was conversing with fertile women are more likely to seek creative sentence structure that indicates fitness.
The researchers found that when a young man talking to a woman who was in the fertile period of her menstrual cycle, the youth will react to small changes in facial color, sound and scent of a woman's body. These changes enable the desire to marry a man and cause him to change the way he spoke.


In a conversation, the speaker will usually adjust the choice of words to denote the same opinion and proximity. But when talking with fertile women, men tend not to equate or copying the sentence structure of the woman and tried to have his own opinion.
The study, led by Michael Kaschak, professor of psychology at Florida State University in Tallahassee, was published in the journal PLoS ONE. In one experiment, researchers studied 123 male students in turn when interacting with students at five different times in their menstrual cycle.
Having known each other, men and women are asked to give an explanation for some pictures. When the women are in the low point of her menstrual cycle, men more often mimic the words of a woman with a propensity by 62%. When the woman at the top of the fertile period, the men just mimic the words of women was 49.7%.
"These findings reflect that the men can apply and adapt behaviors differed with prospective partners. This trend is contrary to data showing that the appeal to the other person should lead to a number of compatibility between two people talking," said Dr. Kaschak as reported by The Conversation, Friday (10/02/2012).
Dr. Kaschak said that being creative is one way to demonstrate one's mental acuity. In the context of these experiments, the behavior does not equate to the phrase can be used as a way to show creativity so that he can look a little more prominent.
"If we heard someone else say the word 'teacher was reading a book for children', we will be more likely to say the next sentence with the same grammatical pattern, for example, says' The farmer was feeding grass for horses', not 'farmer was giving a horse to eat grass, "said Nenagh Kemp, a lecturer at the School of Psychology at the University of Tasmania.
Men can show off its potential as a married couple with a slightly different sentence structure. These trends vary depending on how far the woman receives the man made a difference.

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