Social Exclusion and Female Mating Behavior: Rejected Women Show Strategic Enhancement of Short-Term Mating Interest

Because cost asymmetries in sexual reproduction have historically enabled women to exchange sexual access for other resources, including social resources, we tested the possibility that social exclusion would lead women to display an elevated preference for short-term mating strategies in the servic...

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Main Authors: Donald F. Sacco, Steven G. Young, Christina M. Brown, Michael J. Bernstein, Kurt Hugenberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-07-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491201000313
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spelling doaj-81b8fcf1c7754d8c998eae6f38bd125d2020-11-25T03:43:55ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492012-07-011010.1177/14747049120100031310.1177_147470491201000313Social Exclusion and Female Mating Behavior: Rejected Women Show Strategic Enhancement of Short-Term Mating InterestDonald F. SaccoSteven G. YoungChristina M. BrownMichael J. BernsteinKurt HugenbergBecause cost asymmetries in sexual reproduction have historically enabled women to exchange sexual access for other resources, including social resources, we tested the possibility that social exclusion would lead women to display an elevated preference for short-term mating strategies in the service of reaffiliation. In Study 1, women were given false feedback to manipulate social inclusion or exclusion prior to indicating their endorsement of short and long-term mating behaviors. Socially excluded women indicated greater interest in short-term mating and reduced interest in long-term mating. In Study 2, women wrote about a social inclusion, social exclusion, or control experience and then indicated their preference for different male body types. Women in the social exclusion condition preferred more muscular male partners – a pattern of preference typical of short-term mating – than women in the other conditions. Collectively, these results are consistent with a social exchange theory of women's sexual behavior following social exclusion.https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491201000313
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Donald F. Sacco
Steven G. Young
Christina M. Brown
Michael J. Bernstein
Kurt Hugenberg
spellingShingle Donald F. Sacco
Steven G. Young
Christina M. Brown
Michael J. Bernstein
Kurt Hugenberg
Social Exclusion and Female Mating Behavior: Rejected Women Show Strategic Enhancement of Short-Term Mating Interest
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Donald F. Sacco
Steven G. Young
Christina M. Brown
Michael J. Bernstein
Kurt Hugenberg
author_sort Donald F. Sacco
title Social Exclusion and Female Mating Behavior: Rejected Women Show Strategic Enhancement of Short-Term Mating Interest
title_short Social Exclusion and Female Mating Behavior: Rejected Women Show Strategic Enhancement of Short-Term Mating Interest
title_full Social Exclusion and Female Mating Behavior: Rejected Women Show Strategic Enhancement of Short-Term Mating Interest
title_fullStr Social Exclusion and Female Mating Behavior: Rejected Women Show Strategic Enhancement of Short-Term Mating Interest
title_full_unstemmed Social Exclusion and Female Mating Behavior: Rejected Women Show Strategic Enhancement of Short-Term Mating Interest
title_sort social exclusion and female mating behavior: rejected women show strategic enhancement of short-term mating interest
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2012-07-01
description Because cost asymmetries in sexual reproduction have historically enabled women to exchange sexual access for other resources, including social resources, we tested the possibility that social exclusion would lead women to display an elevated preference for short-term mating strategies in the service of reaffiliation. In Study 1, women were given false feedback to manipulate social inclusion or exclusion prior to indicating their endorsement of short and long-term mating behaviors. Socially excluded women indicated greater interest in short-term mating and reduced interest in long-term mating. In Study 2, women wrote about a social inclusion, social exclusion, or control experience and then indicated their preference for different male body types. Women in the social exclusion condition preferred more muscular male partners – a pattern of preference typical of short-term mating – than women in the other conditions. Collectively, these results are consistent with a social exchange theory of women's sexual behavior following social exclusion.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491201000313
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