Authors
Norman P Li, Jose C Yong, William Tov, Oliver Sng, Garth JO Fletcher, Katherine A Valentine, Yun F Jiang, Daniel Balliet
Publication date
2013/11
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Volume
105
Issue
5
Pages
757
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Although mate preference research has firmly established that men value physical attractiveness more than women do and women value social status more than men do, recent speed-dating studies have indicated mixed evidence (at best) for whether people’s sex-differentiated mate preferences predict actual mate choices. According to an evolutionary, mate preference priority model (Li, Bailey, Kenrick, & Linsenmeier, 2002; Li & Kenrick, 2006; Li, Valentine, & Patel, 2011), the sexes are largely similar in what they ideally like, but for long-term mates, they should differ on what they most want to avoid in early selection contexts. Following this model, we conducted experiments using online messaging and modified speed-dating platforms. Results indicate that when a mating pool includes people at the low end of social status and physical attractiveness, mate choice criteria are sex-differentiated: Men, more than …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
NP Li, JC Yong, W Tov, O Sng, GJO Fletcher… - Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2013