Cross-Cultural Variation in Mate Preferences for Averageness, Symmetry, Body Size, and Masculinity

Sexual selection has greatly influenced the evolved biology, psychology, and culture of humans and favors individuals who choose healthy and fertile mates. Physical traits that cue quality are generally preferred and perceived as attractive. However, because such traits often involve cost-benefit tr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cross-cultural research 2013-05, Vol.47 (2), p.162-197
Hauptverfasser: Pisanski, Katarzyna, Feinberg, David R.
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description Sexual selection has greatly influenced the evolved biology, psychology, and culture of humans and favors individuals who choose healthy and fertile mates. Physical traits that cue quality are generally preferred and perceived as attractive. However, because such traits often involve cost-benefit trade-offs, mate preferences are expected to vary among cultures as a function of local ecology and social environment and among individuals as a function of one’s personal experiences and life history. As such, it is essential to understand how ontogenetic and environmental factors influence mate preferences that may be locally adaptive and context specific. Here the authors review a growing body of comparative research, demonstrating predictable patterns in men’s and women’s preferences for facial averageness, facial symmetry, stature, body mass, and facial and vocal masculinity or femininity both between and within cultures. The authors consider potential factors influencing variation in preferences that include resource availability, disease prevalence, paternal investment, visual experience, and cultural norms.
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source SAGE Complete A-Z List; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Biology
Body image
Comparative Analysis
Cross cultural studies
Cross-cultural analysis
Crosscultural Differences
Environmental Factors
Females
Gender
Height
Human Ecology
Interpersonal relationships. Groups. Leadership
Males
Masculinity
Mate Selection
Personal appearance
Personal relationships
Personality traits
Preferences
Social environment
Social psychology
Sociology
Sociology of communication and mass media. Sociolinguistics
Sociology of knowledge and sociology of culture
Sociology of the body
title Cross-Cultural Variation in Mate Preferences for Averageness, Symmetry, Body Size, and Masculinity
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