| Larger 
                                      Breasts = Lower Grades? Online Voters Say 
                                      'Yes'
 Visitors to WhatsMyImage.com have voted: 
                                      Breast size inversely proportional to perceived 
                                      Grade Point Average. Gender and Race also 
                                      studied.
 Princeton, 
                                      NJ 
                                      (PRWEB) February 21, 2006 –- Since 
                                      its launch in May 2005, WhatsMyImage.com 
                                      has become a popular destination for web 
                                      surfers across the globe. Members of the 
                                      completely free website upload photos of 
                                      themselves, from which complete strangers 
                                      then make guesses about the details of their 
                                      private lives. Question topics range from 
                                      academic performance to physical attributes 
                                      to sexual experience and beyond. The 
                                      founders of WhatsMyImage.com 
                                      recently decided to analyze the hundreds 
                                      of thousands of votes that had been accumulating 
                                      on their web servers since May. They focused 
                                      specifically on how self-reported properties 
                                      such as race, gender, and physical appearance 
                                      were correlated to perceived Grade Point 
                                      Average (GPA). The 
                                      study yielded some interesting results. 
                                      Although gender did not appear to be correlated 
                                      to voters’ assumptions about a person’s 
                                      GPA, a correlation to race did exist. Specifically, 
                                      voters guessed that Asian students had higher 
                                      GPAs than their Caucasian and African-American 
                                      counterparts by an average of over 0.2 points 
                                      (on a 4.0 scale). Perhaps 
                                      most interesting, however, was the staggering 
                                      correlation between female bra size and 
                                      GPA. On average, voters guessed that “A-cup” 
                                      students had GPAs that were 0.3 points higher 
                                      than those of “D-cup” students. 
                                      “B-cup” and “C-cup” 
                                      students were voted to have GPAs in the 
                                      middle of that range, each averaging about 
                                      0.2 points higher than the “D-cup” 
                                      group. When 
                                      discussing these results, the site’s 
                                      founders are quick to point out that this 
                                      is a study of public opinion, not fact. 
                                      “We have no reason to believe that 
                                      there is an actual link between any of these 
                                      attributes and Grade Point Average,” 
                                      commented WhatsMyImage.com 
                                      co-founder Sameer Shariff. “This analysis 
                                      simply suggests that our voters may subscribe 
                                      to the stereotypes reflected in its results.” Co-founder 
                                      Robert J. Moore, an Operations Research 
                                      and Financial Engineering major at Princeton 
                                      University, also warned against interpreting 
                                      these results as anything but entertainment: 
                                      “This is certainly not a study of 
                                      any academic caliber. These responses are 
                                      vulnerable to selection bias and could also 
                                      be influenced by any number of confounding 
                                      variables.” For 
                                      more information, or to register a free 
                                      account, visit www.whatsmyimage.com.
 Press Contact: Robert Moore
 Company Name: WHAT'S MY IMAGE DOT COM
 Email: email protected from spam bots
 Phone: 856-308-9661
 Website: http://www.whatsmyimage.com
 More Information: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2006/2/prweb349458.htm
  
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