On February 14th local time in Vienna, Austrian social scientist Karl Grammer released a research report stating that women are naturally predisposed to flirt with men, even if they find them unattractive.
Gleimer said that according to his research, women often automatically flirt with new men when they meet them, but the intimacy only lasts for a few minutes. The purpose of a woman's actions is usually to evaluate the men she meets and determine whether they are "worth having.".
Gleimer is a social behaviorist at the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute of Urban Ethics in Austria. He came to this conclusion after studying the behavior of 45 strange men and women, all of whom were around the age of 20 when they were surveyed. Grammer carefully studied some of the women's actions that symbolize their willingness to socialize, such as fiddling with clothes, combing their hair, and actions with the meaning of "rejection", such as hugging their shoulders with both hands. Finally, she concluded that when meeting new men, women are mostly willing to take the initiative to express some obvious love and try to attract the attention of men. But this is not to say that women find men they meet attractive.
In most cases, even if women find that the men they meet are not attractive at all, they do not send a clear rejection signal at the beginning. Only when men speak too much can women express a clear "negative" signal. But after a few minutes of communication between women and men, they gradually began to express their true thoughts.