Health | gaydar Gaydar: It's All in the Eyes By Kevin Spak Posted Aug 4, 2009 12:40 PM CDT Copied Laura Fefchak, right, and Nancy Robinson, center, of Urbandale, Iowa, react to the ruling in favor of same-sex marriage from the Iowa Supreme Court, April 3, 2009. (AP Photo/David Purdy) Gaydar is real, according to a new study, but only if you don’t think about it too hard. Participants were shown the faces of 98 straight women and 94 lesbians taken from a dating website, reports Miler-McCune, and were able to guess sexual orientation rapidly, at a rate better than chance. That held true even when the photos were cropped to include only the women’s eyes. In a separate study, one group was told to identify the faces quickly, while another was to carefully consider each image. The snap-deciders proved accurate, while the thinkers did not, suggesting that conscious thought could inhibit the instinct. Researchers aren’t sure what causes the phenomenon; they hypothesize that lesbian faces may be more masculine “whether by nature, nurture, or both,” but aren’t sure what to make of the eyes-only result. Read These Next Mom of Karoline Leavitt's nephew has a message for her. A beach massacre at a Jewish event in Australia killed 12. Gunman kills at least 2 at Brown University. Peggy Noonan: Kirk assassination starting to look 'epochal.' Report an error