Can the style of shoes worn by women influence the behavior of men? The French think so. Science Daily reports on research conducted at the Université de Bretagne-Sud, where study author Nicolas Guéguen set up experiments in which he watched what happened when a woman in flat shoes asked people to complete a survey, and whether or not they complied more readily when she was wearing high heels. He also tested whether or not people’s spontaneous urge to help changed when the same woman — again wearing shoes with different heel sizes — dropped a glove. The answers are unsurprising. Guéguen found that men’s helpfulness increased along with the height of the heels a woman was wearing. Also unsurprising, heel height had no influence on other women’s willingness to help. “Women’s shoe heel size exerts a powerful effect on men’s behavior,” summarizes Guéguen, who, Science Daily reports, believes that more research must be done to examine whether this effect depends on a woman’s shoe heel size and on any change of gait due to wearing high heels. Over to you.