Women looking for love may want to stay away from a man who looks like the image below.
Experts used AI to determine the facial features of a typical love rat, and generated a hyper-realistic image of it.
Created from thousands of testimonials from lovers who had been cheated on, it found that bald men with larger noses in their 40s were the least trustworthy.
Smaller lips, blue-gray eyes, laugh lines, and short facial hair completed the look.
They also created a stereotypical trickster woman: she has dark hair, a small nose, and is in her early fifties.
When it came to the most common physical attributes of a love rat, both the male and female were described as sporting a slim build and having “staring eyes.”
The researchers questioned 2,000 Britons to determine the attributes the cheaters had in common and then fed the results into an AI image generator that created “images” of them.
They also found that men were more likely to admit to having been unfaithful, about a third compared to a quarter of women.
Created from thousands of testimonials from lovers who had been cheated on, AI found that bald men with larger noses in their 40s were the least trustworthy.
They also created a stereotype of a trickster woman: she has dark hair, a small nose, and is in her early fifties.
Nearly four in 10 women said they left their partner as soon as they found out.
Another 12 percent abandoned him a month after attacking him, and another 14 percent nudged him after three months.
A further fifth admitted to having stayed with a cheater for at least two more years. In comparison, only one in ten (13 percent) of aggrieved men did the same.
According to the survey, Manchester was the cheating capital of the UK – 43 per cent of Mancunians had had an affair at least once before.
Sheffield and Cardiff followed with 39 and 34 per cent respectively.
Meanwhile, Edinburgh was home to most Faithful residents, and more than half (55 percent) say they have never cheated on any of their partners or been cheated on themselves.
Rosie Maskell, senior marketing executive at MrQ, which carried out the research, said: “Our research showed that just under half (41 per cent) are familiar with this painful betrayal, so many may relate. with the characteristics of these images.
‘The fact that 39 percent of partners who have been wronged leave immediately demonstrates that loyalty is a valuable quality in our partner.
The researchers questioned 2,000 Britons to determine the attributes the cheaters had in common and then fed the results into an AI image generator that created “images” of them.
‘Obviously, it is important to note that these are based on statistical analysis and will not apply to all individuals.
“People’s behavior is defined by their decisions and actions, not by their appearance.”
These findings contrast with a study 2020 who reported a lack of love and intimacy in a relationship were linked to longer affairs and more public dates with the affair partner.
Previous studies have also indicated that whether your partner cheats on you could depend on his or her attractiveness, according to researchers at Harvard University.
TO study 2017 reported that having an attractive male or female partner is like holding a cookie in front of a dog: almost too irresistible to people outside the partner.
“More physically attractive people are more often the target of poaching attempts,” the study states.