"Most previous work on attractiveness focused on the effect of isolated features," said professor Nikolaus Troje at Queen's University in Canada.
"The current study demonstrates how important it is that these features fit together well," Troje said.
The study participants were shown schematic point-light displays that depict a person using 15 moving dots. The representation conveyed both the individual characteristics of a person's movements and their individual body shape.
Troje's team isolated these two areas and separately measured the attractiveness of individual movement styles as well as individual body shapes based on ratings obtained from research participants.
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Based on this data, the researchers asked the question: Is the attractiveness of the isolated movement and the attractiveness of the isolated body shape sufficient to predict the attractiveness of the hybrid walker?
It is not; the hybrid walkers are deemed less attractive than predicted by the movement and the shape used to make them, researchers said.
"We found that attractiveness depends on internal consistency - whether the movement and the shape match each other or not," said Troje.
The results call for re-examination of earlier research that looked at attractiveness in a piecemeal way, the study suggests.
"They can also be used to formulate advice to people who are working on improving their own appearance. What works for one person may not work for another one. If in doubt, just be yourself," Troje said.
The study was published in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior.