famously proclaimed that “a hoe never gets cold” — and science wants to back her up on it.A new study published in the British Journal of Social Psychology has determined that scantily clad women are no more likely to feel chilly on a winter’s night out than their more covered-up counterparts.
The study — “When looking ‘hot’ means not feeling cold: Evidence that self-objectification inhibits feelings of being cold” — was co-authored by six scholars, including University of South Florida grad student Roxanne Felig, 25.
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