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Social proof

Does social proof make you more attractive?

Social proof / pre-selection (mate-choice copying) raises a man's attractiveness to women, but the effect is modest and asymmetric. A 2018 systematic review and meta-analysis (Gouda-Vossos et al.) found women rate male targets as more desirable when presented alongside a female, with no obvious parallel effect for male choice of women — though that sex difference narrows in studies that use cues to "augment" desirability, and the literature shows high heterogeneity and moderate publication bias toward positive reports. Experiments (Rodeheffer et al. 2016) show men shown with an attractive current romantic partner are judged more desirable, mediated by women's belief that such men possess unobservable positive qualities. However, the mechanism appears to be domain-general social conformity rather than a specialized adaptation: women's ratings of men's faces shift toward others' opinions by roughly the same small amount (~0.13 on a 100-point scale) as for hands and abstract art (Street et al. 2018). Net direction is positive, but magnitude is small and easily swamped by the target's own attractiveness.

How it factors into your fit: Award a modest positive bump for evidence of social proof/pre-selection (friends, being desired by women), capped low (single-digit points) with strong diminishing returns; it modulates rather than dominates a score driven by direct attractiveness traits.

Evidence & sources