Success is — to a measurable degree— in the eyes of the beholder, suggests this study of beautiful bicycle racers and not-as-beautiful bicycle racers:
“Females often prefer to mate with high quality males, and one aspect of quality is physical performance. Although a preference for physically fitter males is therefore predicted, the relationship between attractiveness and performance has rarely been quantified. Here, I test for such a relationship in humans and ask whether variation in (endurance) performance is associated with variation in facial attractiveness within elite professional cyclists that finished the 2012 Tour de France. I show that riders that performed better were more attractive, and that this preference was strongest in women not using a hormonal contraceptive. Thereby, I show that, within this preselected but relatively homogeneous sample of the male population, facial attractiveness signals endurance performance.”
Bill Andrews gives his take on this, in Discover.
Postma is co-author of the possibly-related “Genetic constraints underlying human reproductive timing in a pre-modern Swiss village,” A. Bürkli and E. Postma, Evolution,vol. 68, no. 2, pp. 526–537, February 2014.
(Thanks to investigator Steve Nadis for bringing this to our attention. )