Tag Archives: Attractive

Sharon Osbourne ‘paid a fortune’ to look attractive, admits to being ‘too gaunt’ following Ozempic use – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Sharon Osbourne ‘paid a fortune’ to look attractive, admits to being ‘too gaunt’ following Ozempic use Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Sharon Osbourne warns against Ozempic after becoming ‘too skinny’ USA TODAY
  3. Sharon Osbourne Says ‘Be Careful What You Wish For’ After Her Weight Hits Under 100 Pounds Due to Ozempic Entertainment Tonight
  4. Sharon Osbourne On Caring for Husband Ozzy, 74, Amid Health Struggles SurvivorNet
  5. Sharon Osbourne warns against using Ozempic after losing 42 pounds in less than a year: ‘Be careful what you wish for’ Yahoo Life
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Sharon Osbourne ‘paid a fortune’ to look attractive, admits to being ‘too gaunt’ following Ozempic use – Fox News

  1. Sharon Osbourne ‘paid a fortune’ to look attractive, admits to being ‘too gaunt’ following Ozempic use Fox News
  2. Sharon Osbourne warns against Ozempic after becoming ‘too skinny’ USA TODAY
  3. Sharon Osbourne Says ‘Be Careful What You Wish For’ After Her Weight Hits Under 100 Pounds Due to Ozempic Entertainment Tonight
  4. Sharon Osbourne On Caring for Husband Ozzy, 74, Amid Health Struggles SurvivorNet
  5. Sharon Osbourne warns against using Ozempic after losing 42 pounds in less than a year: ‘Be careful what you wish for’ Yahoo Life
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Michigan State head coaching candidates: Jonathan Smith, Mike Elko attractive options, per recruiting experts – 247Sports

  1. Michigan State head coaching candidates: Jonathan Smith, Mike Elko attractive options, per recruiting experts 247Sports
  2. Mel Tucker Puts Michigan State in a Familiar and Uncomfortable Spotlight Over Sexual Misconduct The Wall Street Journal
  3. Couch: Michigan State’s football team faces a massive week – and the realization more distractions are ahead Lansing State Journal
  4. Kirkwood: How Tucker scandal may hurt MSU Detroit News
  5. Big Ten Roundup (Sept. 20): Michigan State Fires Mel Tucker, Wisconsin Coach a Favorite to Replace Him Sports Illustrated
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Cannes: Ethan Hawke Praises ‘Strange Way of Life’ Co-Star Pedro Pascal as “Very Attractive, Extremely Talented Man” – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Cannes: Ethan Hawke Praises ‘Strange Way of Life’ Co-Star Pedro Pascal as “Very Attractive, Extremely Talented Man” Hollywood Reporter
  2. So About That Gay Cowboy Movie Starring Pedro Pascal and Ethan Hawke… Yahoo Entertainment
  3. ‘Strange Way of Life’ Review: Pedro Almodóvar’s Gay Western Short Leaves You Wanting More IndieWire
  4. ‘Strange Way of Life’ Review: Pedro Almodóvar’s Fashion Short Reduces Its Gay Cowboys to a Couple of Clothes Horses Variety
  5. Strange Way Of Life Review: Half An Hour Of Absolute Cinematic Mastery NDTV Movies
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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20 dividend stocks with high yields that have become more attractive right now

Income-seeking investors are looking at an opportunity to scoop up shares of real estate investment trusts. Stocks in that asset class have become more attractive as prices have fallen and cash flow is improving.

Below is a broad screen of REITs that have high dividend yields and are also expected to generate enough excess cash in 2023 to enable increases in dividend payouts.

REIT prices may turn a corner in 2023

REITs distribute most of their income to shareholders to maintain their tax-advantaged status. But the group is cyclical, with pressure on share prices when interest rates rise, as they have this year at an unprecedented scale. A slowing growth rate for the group may have also placed a drag on the stocks.

And now, with talk that the Federal Reserve may begin to temper its cycle of interest-rate increases, we may be nearing the time when REIT prices rise in anticipation of an eventual decline in interest rates. The market always looks ahead, which means long-term investors who have been waiting on the sidelines to buy higher-yielding income-oriented investments may have to make a move soon.

During an interview on Nov 28, James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis and a member of the Federal Open Market Committee, discussed the central bank’s cycle of interest-rate increases meant to reduce inflation.

When asked about the potential timing of the Fed’s “terminal rate” (the peak federal funds rate for this cycle), Bullard said: “Generally speaking, I have advocated that sooner is better, that you do want to get to the right level of the policy rate for the current data and the current situation.”

Fed’s Bullard says in MarketWatch interview that markets are underpricing the chance of still-higher rates

In August we published this guide to investing in REITs for income. Since the data for that article was pulled on Aug. 24, the S&P 500
SPX,
-0.50%
has declined 4% (despite a 10% rally from its 2022 closing low on Oct. 12), but the benchmark index’s real estate sector has declined 13%.

REITs can be placed broadly into two categories. Mortgage REITs lend money to commercial or residential borrowers and/or invest in mortgage-backed securities, while equity REITs own property and lease it out.

The pressure on share prices can be greater for mortgage REITs, because the mortgage-lending business slows as interest rates rise. In this article we are focusing on equity REITs.

Industry numbers

The National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts (Nareit) reported that third-quarter funds from operations (FFO) for U.S.-listed equity REITs were up 14% from a year earlier. To put that number in context, the year-over-year growth rate of quarterly FFO has been slowing — it was 35% a year ago. And the third-quarter FFO increase compares to a 23% increase in earnings per share for the S&P 500 from a year earlier, according to FactSet.

The NAREIT report breaks out numbers for 12 categories of equity REITs, and there is great variance in the growth numbers, as you can see here.

FFO is a non-GAAP measure that is commonly used to gauge REITs’ capacity for paying dividends. It adds amortization and depreciation (noncash items) back to earnings, while excluding gains on the sale of property. Adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) goes further, netting out expected capital expenditures to maintain the quality of property investments.

The slowing FFO growth numbers point to the importance of looking at REITs individually, to see if expected cash flow is sufficient to cover dividend payments.

Screen of high-yielding equity REITs

For 2022 through Nov. 28, the S&P 500 has declined 17%, while the real estate sector has fallen 27%, excluding dividends.

Over the very long term, through interest-rate cycles and the liquidity-driven bull market that ended this year, equity REITs have fared well, with an average annual return of 9.3% for 20 years, compared to an average return of 9.6% for the S&P 500, both with dividends reinvested, according to FactSet.

This performance might surprise some investors, when considering the REITs’ income focus and the S&P 500’s heavy weighting for rapidly growing technology companies.

For a broad screen of equity REITs, we began with the Russell 3000 Index
RUA,
-0.18%,
which represents 98% of U.S. companies by market capitalization.

We then narrowed the list to 119 equity REITs that are followed by at least five analysts covered by FactSet for which AFFO estimates are available.

If we divide the expected 2023 AFFO by the current share price, we have an estimated AFFO yield, which can be compared with the current dividend yield to see if there is expected “headroom” for dividend increases.

For example, if we look at Vornado Realty Trust
VNO,
+1.01%,
the current dividend yield is 8.56%. Based on the consensus 2023 AFFO estimate among analysts polled by FactSet, the expected AFFO yield is only 7.25%. This doesn’t mean that Vornado will cut its dividend and it doesn’t even mean the company won’t raise its payout next year. But it might make it less likely to do so.

Among the 119 equity REITs, 104 have expected 2023 AFFO headroom of at least 1.00%.

Here are the 20 equity REITs from our screen with the highest current dividend yields that have at least 1% expected AFFO headroom:

Company Ticker Dividend yield Estimated 2023 AFFO yield Estimated “headroom” Market cap. ($mil) Main concentration
Brandywine Realty Trust BDN,
+1.82%
11.52% 12.82% 1.30% $1,132 Offices
Sabra Health Care REIT Inc. SBRA,
+2.02%
9.70% 12.04% 2.34% $2,857 Health care
Medical Properties Trust Inc. MPW,
+1.90%
9.18% 11.46% 2.29% $7,559 Health care
SL Green Realty Corp. SLG,
+2.18%
9.16% 10.43% 1.28% $2,619 Offices
Hudson Pacific Properties Inc. HPP,
+1.55%
9.12% 12.69% 3.57% $1,546 Offices
Omega Healthcare Investors Inc. OHI,
+1.30%
9.05% 10.13% 1.08% $6,936 Health care
Global Medical REIT Inc. GMRE,
+2.03%
8.75% 10.59% 1.84% $629 Health care
Uniti Group Inc. UNIT,
+0.28%
8.30% 25.00% 16.70% $1,715 Communications infrastructure
EPR Properties EPR,
+0.62%
8.19% 12.24% 4.05% $3,023 Leisure properties
CTO Realty Growth Inc. CTO,
+1.58%
7.51% 9.34% 1.83% $381 Retail
Highwoods Properties Inc. HIW,
+0.76%
6.95% 8.82% 1.86% $3,025 Offices
National Health Investors Inc. NHI,
+1.90%
6.75% 8.32% 1.57% $2,313 Senior housing
Douglas Emmett Inc. DEI,
+0.33%
6.74% 10.30% 3.55% $2,920 Offices
Outfront Media Inc. OUT,
+0.70%
6.68% 11.74% 5.06% $2,950 Billboards
Spirit Realty Capital Inc. SRC,
+0.72%
6.62% 9.07% 2.45% $5,595 Retail
Broadstone Net Lease Inc. BNL,
-0.93%
6.61% 8.70% 2.08% $2,879 Industial
Armada Hoffler Properties Inc. AHH,
-0.08%
6.38% 7.78% 1.41% $807 Offices
Innovative Industrial Properties Inc. IIPR,
+1.09%
6.24% 7.53% 1.29% $3,226 Health care
Simon Property Group Inc. SPG,
+0.95%
6.22% 9.55% 3.33% $37,847 Retail
LTC Properties Inc. LTC,
+1.09%
5.99% 7.60% 1.60% $1,541 Senior housing
Source: FactSet

Click on the tickers for more about each company. You should read Tomi Kilgore’s detailed guide to the wealth of information for free on the MarketWatch quote page.

The list includes each REIT’s main property investment type. However, many REITs are highly diversified. The simplified categories on the table may not cover all of their investment properties.

Knowing what a REIT invests in is part of the research you should do on your own before buying any individual stock. For arbitrary examples, some investors may wish to steer clear of exposure to certain areas of retail or hotels, or they may favor health-care properties.

Largest REITs

Several of the REITs that passed the screen have relatively small market capitalizations. You might be curious to see how the most widely held REITs fared in the screen. So here’s another list of the 20 largest U.S. REITs among the 119 that passed the first cut, sorted by market cap as of Nov. 28:

Company Ticker Dividend yield Estimated 2023 AFFO yield Estimated “headroom” Market cap. ($mil) Main concentration
Prologis Inc. PLD,
+1.29%
2.84% 4.36% 1.52% $102,886 Warehouses and logistics
American Tower Corp. AMT,
+0.68%
2.66% 4.82% 2.16% $99,593 Communications infrastructure
Equinix Inc. EQIX,
+0.62%
1.87% 4.79% 2.91% $61,317 Data centers
Crown Castle Inc. CCI,
+1.03%
4.55% 5.42% 0.86% $59,553 Wireless Infrastructure
Public Storage PSA,
+0.11%
2.77% 5.35% 2.57% $50,680 Self-storage
Realty Income Corp. O,
+0.26%
4.82% 6.46% 1.64% $38,720 Retail
Simon Property Group Inc. SPG,
+0.95%
6.22% 9.55% 3.33% $37,847 Retail
VICI Properties Inc. VICI,
+0.41%
4.69% 6.21% 1.52% $32,013 Leisure properties
SBA Communications Corp. Class A SBAC,
+0.59%
0.97% 4.33% 3.36% $31,662 Communications infrastructure
Welltower Inc. WELL,
+2.37%
3.66% 4.76% 1.10% $31,489 Health care
Digital Realty Trust Inc. DLR,
+0.69%
4.54% 6.18% 1.64% $30,903 Data centers
Alexandria Real Estate Equities Inc. ARE,
+1.38%
3.17% 4.87% 1.70% $24,451 Offices
AvalonBay Communities Inc. AVB,
+0.89%
3.78% 5.69% 1.90% $23,513 Multifamily residential
Equity Residential EQR,
+1.10%
4.02% 5.36% 1.34% $23,503 Multifamily residential
Extra Space Storage Inc. EXR,
+0.29%
3.93% 5.83% 1.90% $20,430 Self-storage
Invitation Homes Inc. INVH,
+1.58%
2.84% 5.12% 2.28% $18,948 Single-family residental
Mid-America Apartment Communities Inc. MAA,
+1.46%
3.16% 5.18% 2.02% $18,260 Multifamily residential
Ventas Inc. VTR,
+1.63%
4.07% 5.95% 1.88% $17,660 Senior housing
Sun Communities Inc. SUI,
+2.09%
2.51% 4.81% 2.30% $17,346 Multifamily residential
Source: FactSet

Simon Property Group Inc.
SPG,
+0.95%
is the only REIT to make both lists.

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Raoul Pal Says Crypto Sell-Off ‘Gut-Check Quick Drop,’ New Lows Unlikely; Risk/Reward Getting ‘Really, Really Attractive’

After the semblance of recovery seen in the cryptocurrency market since the mid-June bottom, digital currencies pulled back sharply on Friday, along with the equity market.

Pal Roots For Cryptos: Former Goldman Sachs executive and macroeconomic expert Raoul Pal, however, isn’t too concerned about the weakness. “Ah, the old cheeky pre-merger crypto shakeout I see…,” the economists said.

Ethereum ETH/USD is about to undergo the most significant upgrade in its history, called the Ethereum Merge, which is expected on Sept. 15. This represents the joining of the existing execution layer of Ethereum with its new proof-of-stake consensus layer, which will eliminate the need for energy-intensive mining.

Pal recently said Ethereum remains the “safest, easiest allocation,” and anticipates demand shock for the crypto, Dailyhodl reported. He sees increased demand from institutional investors.

See also: How to Buy Bitcoin (BTC)

Time For Accumulation: New lows are unlikely, he said, apparently suggesting that the crypto market may not pull back all the way down to its mid-June lows. He sees it most likely as a “gut-check quick drop.”

If all the cryptos hit new lows, Pal said he would keep adding. He reasoned that the two-year risk/reward gets “really attractive.”

“50% downside vs possible 10x upside = 20:1 R/R,” Pal said.

At last check, Bitcoin BTC/USD was slipping 0.89% to $21,263.41 and Ethereum was down a steeper 5.12% at $1,622.10, according to Benzinga Pro data.

Photo: Courtesy of CoinDesk on Flickr 



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These Microbes Could Make You More Attractive to Mosquitoes, Mice Study Finds

Mosquitoes are the world’s deadliest animal. Over 1 million deaths per year are attributed to mosquito-borne diseases, including malaria, yellow fever, dengue fever, Zika, and chikungunya fever.

 

How mosquitoes seek out and feed on their hosts are important factors in how a virus circulates in nature. Mosquitoes spread diseases by acting as carriers of viruses and other pathogens: A mosquito that bites a person infected with a virus can acquire the virus and pass it on to the next person it bites.

For immunologists and infectious disease researchers like me, a better understanding of how a virus interacts with a host may offer new strategies for preventing and treating mosquito-borne diseases.

In our recently published study, my colleagues and I found that some viruses can alter a person’s body odor to be more attractive to mosquitoes, leading to more bites that allow a virus to spread.

Viruses change host odors to attract mosquitoes

Mosquitoes locate a potential host through different sensory cues, such as your body temperature and the carbon dioxide emitted from your breath.

Odors also play a role. Previous lab research has found that mice infected with malaria have changes in their scents that make them more attractive to mosquitoes.

 

With this in mind, my colleagues and I wondered if other mosquito-borne viruses, such as dengue and Zika, can also change a person’s scent to make them more attractive to mosquitoes, and whether there is a way to prevent these changes.

To investigate this, we placed mice infected with the dengue or Zika virus, uninfected mice, and mosquitoes in one of three arms of a glass chamber. When we applied airflow through the mouse chambers to funnel their odors toward the mosquitoes, we found that more mosquitoes chose to fly toward the infected mice over the uninfected mice.

We ruled out carbon dioxide as a reason for why the mosquitoes were attracted to the infected mice, because while Zika-infected mice emitted less carbon dioxide than uninfected mice, dengue-infected mice did not change emission levels.

Likewise, we ruled out body temperature as a potential attractive factor when mosquitoes did not differentiate between mice with elevated or normal body temperatures.

Then we assessed the role of body odors in the mosquitoes’ increased attraction to infected mice.

After placing a filter in the glass chambers to prevent mice odors from reaching the mosquitoes, we found that the number of mosquitoes flying toward infected and uninfected mice was comparable.

 

This suggests that there was something about the odors of the infected mice that drew the mosquitoes toward them.

To identify the odor, we isolated 20 different gaseous chemical compounds from the scent emitted by the infected mice. Of these, we found three to stimulate a significant response in mosquito antennae.

When we applied these three compounds to the skin of healthy mice and the hands of human volunteers, only one, acetophenone, attracted more mosquitoes compared to the control. We found that infected mice produced 10 times more acetophenone than uninfected mice.

Similarly, we found that the odors collected from the armpits of dengue fever patients contained more acetophenone than those from healthy people.

When we applied the dengue fever patient odors on one hand of a volunteer and a healthy person’s odor on the other hand, mosquitoes were consistently more attracted to the hand with dengue fever odors.

These findings imply that the dengue and Zika viruses are capable of increasing the amount of acetophenone their hosts produce and emit, making them even more attractive to mosquitoes. When uninfected mosquitoes bite these attractive hosts, they may go on to bite other people and spread the virus even further.

 

How viruses increase acetophenone production

Next, we wanted to figure out how viruses were increasing the amount of mosquito-attracting acetophenone their hosts produce.

Acetophenone, along with being a chemical commonly used as a fragrance in perfumes, is also a metabolic byproduct commonly produced by certain bacteria living on the skin and in the intestines of both people and mice. So we wondered if it had something to do with changes in the type of bacteria on the skin.

To test this idea, we removed either the skin or intestinal bacteria from infected mice before exposing them to mosquitoes.

While mosquitoes were still more attracted to infected mice with depleted intestinal bacteria compared to uninfected mice, they were significantly less attracted to infected mice with depleted skin bacteria.

These results suggest that skin microbes are an essential source of acetophenone.

When we compared the skin bacteria compositions of infected and uninfected mice, we identified that a common type of rod-shaped bacteria, Bacillus, was a major acetophenone producer and had significantly increased numbers on infected mice.

This meant that the dengue and Zika viruses were able to change their host’s odor by altering the microbiome of the skin.

Reducing mosquito-attracting odors

Finally, we wondered if there was a way to prevent this change in odors.

We found one potential option when we observed that infected mice had decreased levels of an important microbe-fighting molecule produced by skin cells, called RELMα. This suggested that the dengue and Zika viruses suppressed production of this molecule, making the mice more vulnerable to infection.

Vitamin A and its related chemical compounds are known to strongly boost production of RELMα. So we fed a vitamin A derivative to infected mice over the course of a few days and measured the amount of RELMα and Bacillus bacteria present on their skin, then exposed them to mosquitoes.

We found that infected mice treated with the vitamin A derivative were able to restore their RELMα levels back to those of uninfected mice, as well as reduce the amount of Bacillus bacteria on their skin. Mosquitoes were also no more attracted to these treated, infected mice than uninfected mice.

Our next step is to replicate these results in people and eventually apply what we learn to patients. Vitamin A deficiency is common in developing countries. This is especially the case in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, where mosquito-transmitted viral diseases are prevalent.

Our next steps are to investigate whether dietary vitamin A or its derivatives could reduce mosquito attraction to people infected with Zika and dengue, and subsequently reduce mosquito-borne diseases in the long term.

Penghua Wang, Assistant Professor of Immunology, University of Connecticut.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

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Mind-Altering Parasite May Make Infected People More Attractive, Study Suggests

The brain-hijacking parasite Toxoplasma gondii seems to be almost everywhere. The microscopic invader is thought to infect up to 50 percent of people, and a range of studies suggests it may alter human behavior, in addition to that of many other animals.

 

The parasite has been linked with a large range of neurological disorders, including schizophrenia and psychotic episodes, and scientists keep uncovering more mysterious effects that may result from infection.

In one such new study, researchers found that men and women infected by the parasite ended up being rated as more attractive and healthier-looking than non-infected individuals.

On the face of it, that might sound strange and unlikely. But hypothetically speaking, the phenomenon could make sense from an evolutionary biology standpoint, scientists say.

Above: Composite images of 10 Toxoplasma-infected women and men (a), beside 10 composite images of 10 non-infected women and men (b).

Amidst the many neurobiological changes T. gondii infection appears to bring about in its hosts, researchers hypothesize some of the effects may occasionally benefit infected animals – which might then benefit the parasite too, by subsequently helping to spur its own transmission prospects.

“In one study, Toxoplasma-infected male rats were perceived as more sexually attractive and were preferred as sexual partners by non-infected females,” researchers explain in a new paper led by first author and biologist Javier Borráz-León from the University of Turku in Finland.

 

Much research has been devoted to investigating whether similar effects can be seen in human cases of T. gondii infection.

The evidence is far from clear, but some evidence suggests infected men have higher levels of testosterone than non-infected men.

Arguably, men with higher levels of testosterone could be more likely to become infected by the parasite in the first place, through greater levels of risk-taking behavior associated with the hormone.

An alternative view, however, is that the parasite might be capable of subtly altering its host phenotype, manipulating chemicals in the animal’s body, such as neurotransmitters and hormones, for its own subsequent ends.

Those alterations could be far-reaching, Borráz-León and his team suggest.

“Some sexually transmitted parasites, such as T. gondii, may produce changes in the appearance and behavior of the human host, either as a by-product of the infection or as the result of the manipulation of the parasite to increase its spread to new hosts,” the researchers write.

To test this hypothesis, the researchers compared 35 people (22 men, 13 women) infected with T. gondii against 178 people (86 men, 92 women) who did not carry the parasite.

 

All the participants (including the infected) were nonetheless healthy college students, who had previously had their blood tested for another study investigating T. gondii.

Following a number of different tests involving the participants – including surveys, physical measurements, and visual assessments, the researchers found Toxoplasma-infected subjects had significantly lower facial fluctuating asymmetry than the non-infected people.

Fluctuating asymmetry is a measure of deviation from symmetrical features, with lower levels of asymmetry (ie. higher symmetry) being linked with better physical health, good genes, and attractiveness, among other things.

In addition, women carrying the parasite were found to have lower body mass and lower BMI than non-infected women, and they reported both higher self-perceived attractiveness and a higher number of sexual partners.

In a separate experiment, a group of 205 independent volunteers rated photographs of the participants’ faces, and the raters found the infected participants looked both significantly more attractive and healthier than the non-infected participants.

Interpreting the results, the researchers say it’s possible that T. gondii infection might produce changes in the facial symmetry of its hosts through changes in endocrinological variables, such as testosterone levels.

 

Further, the parasite could also be influencing metabolic rate in hosts, nudging infected people in ways that might influence their health and attractiveness perceptions.

That said, all of this is speculation at this point, and the team acknowledges other interpretations are viable too, including the idea that highly symmetrical, attractive people might somehow better afford the physiological costs related to parasitism, which in other regards are considered a burden to health.

As for which interpretation is correct, it’s impossible to say for sure based on this one study alone, and the researchers acknowledge that the small sample size of their experiment is a limiting factor for its statistical analysis.

For that reason, future studies with greater numbers of participants will be needed to confirm or deny their overall hypothesis.

But maybe – just maybe, they say – this perplexing parasite isn’t necessarily our enemy after all.

“It is possible that the apparently non-pathological and potentially beneficial interactions between T. gondii and some of its intermediate hosts, such as rats and humans, are the result of co-evolutionary strategies that benefit, or at least do not harm, the fitness of both the parasite and the host,” the researchers write.

The findings are reported in PeerJ.

 

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Things That Can Make You Appear Less Attractive, Says Science — Eat This Not That

Attraction is an art. It’s also a science. Researchers have found that certain lifestyle habits can make you look less attractive, and some of them might surprise you. Some directly affect the quality of your skin, and others seem to act on that indescribable certain something that dictates how good-looking or desirable you appear to others. Read on to find out more—and to ensure your health and the health of others, don’t miss these Sure Signs You’ve Already Had COVID.

Shutterstock

According to a 2017 study, getting just two nights of inadequate sleep can make a person look less attractive. Researchers asked study participants to rate a series of people’s photos based on their attractiveness; the photo subjects who were sleep-deprived were scored as less attractive than people who’d gotten a full eight hours of sleep.

“A healthy, attractive face is characterized by a certain degree of redness, which in turn is indicative of increased vasodilation and vascularization,” the researchers wrote. “Blood flow to the skin is strongly promoted by sleep and this vasodilation may be a way for the body to facilitate the distribution of endogenous defense agents. With a lack of sleep, blood flow to the skin is reduced, and according to raters faces look more pale after not sleeping.” Not just for this reason, experts advise making sleep a priority: Aim to get seven to nine hours of quality sleep each night.

Shutterstock

It’s true: Research has found that consuming too much sugar can actually make you look older by actively aging the skin. That’s because when sugar—glucose or fructose—is ingested, the body produces substances called advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs) in response. These toxins damage collagen and elastin, two proteins in the skin that keep it looking plump and youthful. The result can be wrinkles, sagging, poor skin tone, and age spots. 

Shutterstock

Alcohol dehydrates the skin and causes inflammation. If you habitually drink to excess, research suggests you can expect to see more fine lines, wrinkles, redness, and puffiness. Not a great look. To keep yourself looking your best—and to reduce your risk of cancer or heart disease—avoid alcohol or drink only in moderation. That means no more than two drinks a day for men and just one drink a day for women.

RELATED: How to Lose the Fat Inside Your Belly, Says Physician

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Not only does chronic stress seem to age a person prematurely, studies have found that both men and women with high levels of the stress hormone cortisol are considered less attractive by the opposite sex. “Women seem to be able to detect the men who’ve got the strongest immune response, and they seem to find them the most attractive,” said an author of the 2012 study in which women rated pictures of men; a separate 2013 study found the same results when the gender was flipped.

RELATED: Doing This After Age 60 is “Unhealthy,” Say Physicians

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In one European study, researchers found that men who consumed a vegetarian diet were considered more masculine and attractive by women. The scientists assembled a group of men who ate either vegetarian or meat-inclusive diets. They were given underarm pads to collect their body odor, and women were asked to sniff each pad and assess it for attractiveness and masculinity. Vegetarians scored the highest—and those results held when the groups reversed their dietary habits and the experiment was repeated. And to protect your life and the lives of others, don’t visit any of these 35 Places You’re Most Likely to Catch COVID.

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It’s all about looks! Attractive people have better immune systems, study of blood tests finds 

It’s all about looks! Attractive people have better immune systems, study of blood tests finds

  • Traits linked to attractiveness may be signs the body is better at fighting infection
  • Researchers believe we may be drawn to such looks because our brains seek out healthy partners 
  • Scientists photographed 152 young adults without make-up and with neutral expressions
  • Then 492 people in an online survey were asked to rate their attractiveness
  • Men judged as more attractive by women had more effective ‘natural killer’ cells which can destroy virus-infected cells in the body










Beauty may not be only skin deep as it seems good-looking people appear to have a better immune system.

Traits traditionally linked to attractiveness, such as a symmetrical face and bright eyes, may be signs the body is better at fighting infection, a study of blood tests has found.

Researchers believe we may be drawn to such looks because our brains are hardwired to seek out healthy partners. 

Traits traditionally linked to attractiveness, such as a symmetrical face and bright eyes, may be signs the body is better at fighting infection, a study of blood tests has found (stock image)

Summer Mengelkoch, who led the study at Texas Christian University, said: ‘People who go out to a bar looking to talk to someone attractive are often dismissed as being shallow and told, ‘It is not all about looks’. 

But they are really just following their instincts to find a high-quality mate.’

The study of 152 men and women was published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Scientists photographed 152 young adults without make-up and with neutral expressions. Then 492 people in an online survey were asked to rate their attractiveness.

The most handsome men and beautiful women – according to those of the opposite sex who rated 25 pictures each for the survey – were found to have higher rates of phagocytosis.

Scientists photographed 152 young adults without make-up and with neutral expressions. Then 492 people in an online survey were asked to rate their attractiveness (stock image)

This is the process by which white blood cells ‘eat’ and destroy bacteria before it can make someone ill.

Men judged as more attractive by women had more effective ‘natural killer’ cells which can destroy virus-infected cells in the body, so could help to fight off coronavirus.

It has long been suggested that good-looking people are healthier. Those with symmetrical faces are unlikely to have had developmental problems in the womb or during childhood.

Clear skin and bright, wide eyes indicate good health, because ill people’s eyes tend to become narrower and darker, some experts suggest. And the importance of red lips and rosy cheeks might explain why women wear make-up.

Miss Mengelkoch said: ‘With modern medicine, infections are not as deadly as they used to be, so perhaps it’s okay if people lower their standards and start to give people who are less attractive a shot.’

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