Sexual misperception : individual differences and context effects

The current research evaluated individual differences and contextual effects on men’s robust sexual overperception bias and on women’s tendency to be misperceived. Study 1 pioneered the use of a “speed-meeting” methodology which allowed for a direct calculation of sexual misperception by comparing m...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Perilloux, Carin Jeanne
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-2879
id ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2011-05-2879
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2011-05-28792015-09-20T17:00:38ZSexual misperception : individual differences and context effectsPerilloux, Carin JeanneSexual misperceptionSex differencesError management theoryEvolutionIndividual differencesTestosteroneContest competitionSpeed-meetingSexual attractionSex differencesThe current research evaluated individual differences and contextual effects on men’s robust sexual overperception bias and on women’s tendency to be misperceived. Study 1 pioneered the use of a “speed-meeting” methodology which allowed for a direct calculation of sexual misperception by comparing measures of actual interest to measures of estimated interest across five interactions. As predicted, men demonstrated a robust sexual over-perception bias, a bias that was influenced by their mating strategy and physical attractiveness. Women, on the other hand, consistently underestimated men’s sexual interest in them, and physical attractiveness was a key predictor of their likelihood of being overperceived. Study 2 replicated the prediction tests from Study 1 and narrowed down the exploratory regression models to the most specific and robust effects, namely mating strategy and physical attractiveness. Study 3 examined the effects of testosterone (T) on men’s sexual misperception by manipulating intrasexual competition in the lab. Men engaged in a computer game, which randomly assigned them to win or lose, against an unseen male competitor. After the game, each participant interacted with a trained female confederate posing as a participant, after which they rated her on multiple traits, including interest in her and his estimate of her interest in him. Salivary assays for T were collected before and after the game, and after interacting with the confederate. The results of the experiment demonstrated that although the competition outcome did not affect men’s T, changes in T during the interaction with the woman predicted men’s sexual misperception. The more attractive the man found her, and the more interested he was in her, the more his T increased during their interaction and the more he overperceived her interest. Taken together, these studies indicate that far from a simple sex difference, men’s overperception bias is predictably nuanced and specific.text2011-06-22T14:54:41Z2011-06-22T14:54:53Z2011-06-22T14:54:41Z2011-06-22T14:54:53Z2011-052011-06-22May 20112011-06-22T14:54:53Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-2879eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Sexual misperception
Sex differences
Error management theory
Evolution
Individual differences
Testosterone
Contest competition
Speed-meeting
Sexual attraction
Sex differences
spellingShingle Sexual misperception
Sex differences
Error management theory
Evolution
Individual differences
Testosterone
Contest competition
Speed-meeting
Sexual attraction
Sex differences
Perilloux, Carin Jeanne
Sexual misperception : individual differences and context effects
description The current research evaluated individual differences and contextual effects on men’s robust sexual overperception bias and on women’s tendency to be misperceived. Study 1 pioneered the use of a “speed-meeting” methodology which allowed for a direct calculation of sexual misperception by comparing measures of actual interest to measures of estimated interest across five interactions. As predicted, men demonstrated a robust sexual over-perception bias, a bias that was influenced by their mating strategy and physical attractiveness. Women, on the other hand, consistently underestimated men’s sexual interest in them, and physical attractiveness was a key predictor of their likelihood of being overperceived. Study 2 replicated the prediction tests from Study 1 and narrowed down the exploratory regression models to the most specific and robust effects, namely mating strategy and physical attractiveness. Study 3 examined the effects of testosterone (T) on men’s sexual misperception by manipulating intrasexual competition in the lab. Men engaged in a computer game, which randomly assigned them to win or lose, against an unseen male competitor. After the game, each participant interacted with a trained female confederate posing as a participant, after which they rated her on multiple traits, including interest in her and his estimate of her interest in him. Salivary assays for T were collected before and after the game, and after interacting with the confederate. The results of the experiment demonstrated that although the competition outcome did not affect men’s T, changes in T during the interaction with the woman predicted men’s sexual misperception. The more attractive the man found her, and the more interested he was in her, the more his T increased during their interaction and the more he overperceived her interest. Taken together, these studies indicate that far from a simple sex difference, men’s overperception bias is predictably nuanced and specific. === text
author Perilloux, Carin Jeanne
author_facet Perilloux, Carin Jeanne
author_sort Perilloux, Carin Jeanne
title Sexual misperception : individual differences and context effects
title_short Sexual misperception : individual differences and context effects
title_full Sexual misperception : individual differences and context effects
title_fullStr Sexual misperception : individual differences and context effects
title_full_unstemmed Sexual misperception : individual differences and context effects
title_sort sexual misperception : individual differences and context effects
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-2879
work_keys_str_mv AT perillouxcarinjeanne sexualmisperceptionindividualdifferencesandcontexteffects
_version_ 1716821939248431104