Title: Human%20Mate%20Choice
1Chapter 4
2Mate Selection
- Choosing for
- Genes
- Parenting
- Looking for
- Underlying universals
- Individual preferences
3Male/Female Pressures
- Females
- Choosier than males
- Higher reproductive costs
- Greater emphasis on child support
- Males
- Somewhat choosy (especially compared to non-human
primates!) - Lower reproductive costs
- Greater emphasis on mating
- Interbirth interval
4Male Parenting Investment
- Can the male improve the females rearing
success? - If yes, selection favours males that help rear
- If no, selection favours males that have many
matings
5Quality and Quantity
- Quality fewer, higher caliber offspring
- Quantity more, lower caliber offspring
- Sometimes stated that males favour quantity and
females quantity - This is an oversimplification to be avoided
- Comes down to differential reproductive success
6Life-History Factors
- Brain size correlates with life-history factors
(age of weaning, sexual maturity, gestation
length, longevity) - Species with big brains tend to stretch out
life-history factors
7Brains
- Human
- 1.4 kg brain, 65 kg body
- 0.0215 brain/body
- Monkey
- 0.1 kg brain, 7 kg body
- 0.0143 brain/body
- Baboon
- 0.14 kg brain, 30 kg body
- 0.0047 brain/body
8Gestation Length
- Homo sapiens, average brain capacity of 1350 cc
- Comparison to other primates
- Humans should go 21 months, not only 9
- Humans have a years worth of growth to catch
up on when born
9Brain Size
- Newborn apes brain about 200 cc, roughly half
that of an adults - Newborn humans brain about 450 cc, roughly a
third the size of an adults - Both ape and human brains reach adult size early
in life, but apes brains only have to double,
not triple in size - Brain of 675 cc would make human head to large to
birth
10Birthing Complications
- Maternal and infant survival
- Head size vs. pelvis
- Birth vs. bipedal locomotion
- Menopause
- Grandmother hypothesis
11Ancestral Brain Growth
- Humans departed from apelike growth when adult
brain passed about 770 cc - Beyond this, brain would have to more than double
from birth - Beginning of helplessness in infants
- Essentially, premature birth
- Homo habilis, 800 cc brain
- Homo erectus, 900 cc brain
12Developmental Waypoints
- Human childhood prolonged compared to apes
- Slower physical growth
- Tooth eruption later than in apes
Human Chimpanzee 1st molars 6
3 2nd molars 11-12 7 3rd molars
18-20 9
13Growth Rate and Similarity
- Holly Smith, U of Michigan
- Correlating growth rate with tooth eruption
- Australopithecines growth pattern ape-like
- Early Homo erectus (pre 800 k) growth pattern
intermediate between apes and modern humans - Late H. erectus (post 800 k) growth pattern like
modern humans (and Neanderthals)
14Parental Certainties
- Female
- Always certain
- Maternal certainty
- Male
- Never certain
- Paternal uncertainty
- Descriptions of childs appearance
- Maternal relatives
- Paternal relatives
15Certainties
F -- M
16Cryptic Oestrus
- Concealed ovulation
- No obvious physical indicators of oestrus
- Different from other primates
- Males cant be sure when females are able to
conceive
17Why Have Concealed Ovulation?
- Increase paternal certainty
- Also increase chance of pairbonding
- Decrease paternal certainty
- Reduce infanticide
- Allows females to secure more courtship gifts
- Prevent females from avoiding pregnancy
18Examples of Human Sexually Selected Traits
- Males
- Beards
- Voice
- Upper body
- Height
- Dominance
- Females
- WHR
- Large eyes
- Shiny hair
- Full lips
- Small jaw
- Youthfulness
19Two Perceptions of Beards
- Negative perceptions of increased recklessness,
dirtiness, lower mental competence and lower
intellectual ability, reduced social maturity and
reduced physical attractiveness - Positive perceptions such as masculinity,
strength, intelligence and desirability
20Reed Blunk (1990)
- Facial hair positively contributes to perceptions
of social/physical attractiveness, personality,
composure and competency.
A attractiveness B personality C Competency D
Composure
21Beards Cheating
- Males lacking dominant, desired appearance may
use beard - Hide expressions of emotions, to protect the
dominant image - Disguise weak chin, skin damage
22Male Status is Attractive
- Sadalla et al. (1987)
- Female subjects watched silent video of two men
interacting in office environment - More dominant male judged to be of higher status
and more attractive
23Male Ambition/Dominance
- Buss (1989)
- Ambition and industriousness valued
- Resource potential
24Stimuli
Waist-to-Hip Ratio
- Singh (1993)
- Underweight, normal, overweight
- 0.7 to 1.0 WHRs
25Results Young Subjects
26Results
- Generally, similar male and female patterns in
rankings - Used both WHR and body weight to rank
- Within weight category, subjects systematically
used WHR to infer all attributes - Overall, higher ratings for normal weight than
under- or overweight figures, and for 0.7 WHR
across weight categories
27Kate Moss www.eforu.com/gallery/katemoss/pic62.htm
l
Marilyn Monroe www.topnews.in/light/files/Marilyn-
Monroe.jpg
Gong Li www.hicelebs.com/gallery/gong_li/5.html
Venus De milo webpages.ursinus.edu/classics/zzpict
ures/venus_de_milo.jpg
28Android and Gynoid
- Body shapes
- Testosterone stimulates fat deposits to abdomen
and inhibits deposits to gluteofemoral regions - Estrogens inhibit fat deposits in abdomen and
maximally stimulate deposits to gluteofemoral
region (and other regions, too) - Altering sex hormones alters fat distributions
and body shape - Age indicator highly different between children
and elderly - Honest signals
Image modified from Pioneer Plaques http//www.nd.
edu/jmontgom/ti/GraphicArchive/ Scans/Original20
Files/Pictograph/PioneerPlaque.jpg
29Female/Male Dimorphism
- Not a simple preference for female WHR0.7
- Cross-cultural WHR data
- Resource availability, re fat storage
- Front vs. side view
- Non-overlapping
Male Female
American blacks 0.84 0.75
American whites 0.82 0.73
Mexican-Americans 0.94 0.84
Moost (Mongolia) 0.85 0.76
30Symmetry
- Phenotypic depiction of genotype
- Bilateral symmetry
- Fluctuating asymmetry
- Small, random differences
- Genotype and environment
- Immune system
- Sex hormones
31Age Preferences
- Buss (1989) cross-cultural survey
- Men prefer younger women (average 2.66 years)
- Women prefer older men (average 3.42 years)
32Reproductive Value and Fertility
- Fertility
- Current probability of successful reproduction
- Reproductive Value
- Age-specific future likelihood of offspring
production - Future expected reproductive success
- Average lifetime reproductive success
33Terms
- Monogamy
- Long-term pairbond with one mate
- Polygamy
- Polygyny male with multiple female mates
- Polyandry female with multiple male mates
- Promiscuity
- Males and females mate with multiple short-term
partners
34Savanna Baboons
- Males leave birth troop and join another troop
nearby - Males about twice the size of females
- Males not related to other males in troop, so no
kin selection to ameliorate male-male competition
for mates
35Common Chimpanzees
- Males stay with troop theyre born to, females
leave (dont know why) - Males maintain kinship with other males
- Leads to male-male alliances and bonds
- Male cooperation reinforced by kin selection
- Hunting, troop protection, female acquisition
36Bonobo Chimpanzees
- Females also more likely to leave to join another
troop - However, very different alliance and bonding
pattern in bonobos vs. common chimpanzees
37Size and Structure
- For both chimpanzees and bonobos, males bigger
than females by about 25 - Close to modern humans
- In chimpanzees, like savanna baboons, males
dominant over females - In bonobos, smaller females seem dominant over
males
38Humans
- Culture
- Most allow for polygamy
- Monogamy common (obligate or facultative)
- Testis size
- Bigger if polygamous
- Sperm competition
- Sexual size dimorphism
- Greater M/F difference --gt more polygamous
39Primate Social Organization
female
male
Gibbon
Chimpanzee
monogamous couples
promiscuity strongest bonds between males to
hunt and protect territory
Gorilla
polygamy
Bonobos
promiscuity strongest bonds between females,
but females also bond with males males status
dependent upon mothers
Orangutan
Humans
solitary lives several females within a
males territory
monogamy, polygamy, polyandry, promiscuity
Adapted from de Waal (2006)
40(In)Fidelity
- Monogamy, polygamy, polyandry, and promiscuity
- Male infidelity
- Additional offspring
- Low investment cost
- Female infidelity
- Access to better genes
- Resources from long-term mate
41Infidelity
- Women
- Cheat more when reproductively receptive
- Appearance
- Risk taking male for one-night stand, not
long-term relationship - A major concern for males
- Genetic altruism
42Attitudes
- Buss (1989)
- Males value virginity and chastity in women more
than women do in men - Buss Schmitt (1993)
- American men rated faithfulness and sexual
loyalty as most highly valued traits in woman
for long-term relationship
43Emotional vs. Sexual Infidelity
- Harris (2000)
- Women more bothered by emotional infidelity
- Across studies, 62-86
- Men more bothered by sexual infidelity
- Across studies, 47-60
44Children from Previous Relation
- Step-parenting
- Investing resources in non-biological offspring
- Detractor
45Reality Television
46History
- Long history (eg. Candid Camera)
- MTVs Real World in 1992
- Very popular
- Final episode of Survivor (2000) 51,000,000
viewers - Survivor Palau premiered to 23.66 million
viewers on Thursday, February 17
www.erzwiss.uni-hamburg.de/ personal/gramlinger/
47Finding a Mate Shows
- Long-term (e.g., Bachelor(ette)) or short-term
(e.g., Elimidate) mating strategy - Resources
- Attractiveness
- Fidelity
gsep.pepperdine.edu/.../ fall2003/reality-tv.htm
48Long-term Mating Strategy Shows
- More than one episode
- Generally males dont blatantly display resources
- Cast appears classier
- Winner is supposed to be a husband or wife, not a
fling
http//www.espn.com
49Short-term Mating Strategy Shows
- Usually a single episode
- Women show more skin
- Men explicitly show resources
- Both sexes often deceive by withholding truth or
lying
http//www.knws51.com
50Picking a Long-term Partner (Both Sexes)
- Schmitt Buss (1996)
- Act helpfully, honestly, kindly, sensitively
- Become friends
- Communicate
- Invoke love and show commitment
- Call rivals exploitative, selfish, and insensitive
51Female Attracting Male (Long-Term)
- Display sexual exclusivity
- Question rivals fidelity
52Male Attracting Female (Long-Term)
- Display resources
- Demonstrate commitment
- Derogate rivals achievements
- Derogate rivals resource potential
- Suggest rival lacks goals
53Picking a Short-term Partner
- Buss Schmitt (1993)
- Females maintain higher standards
- Males more likely to accept minimum criteria for
casual sex - Males reject women with indications of low sex
drive, prudishness, and desire for commitment - High promiscuity favoured for short-term but not
long-term partner
54Female Attracting Male (Short-Term)
- Act flirtatious and seductive
- Sexualize appearance
- Make a sexual proposition
- Downplay intelligence
- Have sex
- Call rival sexually unavailable
55Male Attracting Female (Short-Term)
- Give resources immediately
- Machismo
- Display dominance, confidence, and resources
- Show-off
- Derogate rivals resources
56Male Success in Bachelorette
- Men often describe themselves as intelligent,
ambitious, and reference their resources - Greatest Achievements
- Owning my own home and business. Chris C.
(Bachelorette 3) - Graduating from Stanford Business School while
starting companies along the way. Chris M.
(Bachelorette 3)
57Success
- In Bachelorette favoured men are generally
relatively successful - Lawyers, business executives, sports agents, etc.
- Bachelors typically extremely successful and/or
heirs to fortunes - e.g., Andrew Firestone (Bachelor 3)
http//www.abcactionnews.com/entertainment/stories
/0305/030518bachelor.shtml
58Success
- In Bachelor, most women are less successful
- Students, service industry
- Bachelorettes are fairly successful, but lower
status than male counterparts in Bachelor - e.g., Meredith (Bachelorette 2) was a make-up
artist - However, in Bachelorette 4, DeAnna Pappas is real
estate agent and winning man, Jesse, a
professional snowboarder
www.ruggedelegantliving.com/sf/a/002338.html
abc.go.com/primetime/bachelorette/index?pnphotos
t109339
59Age Range
- Bachelorette 3 (25 men, 1 woman)
- Jen, the bachelorette, was 28
- Average of men was 30 (range 25-37)
- Bachelor 6 (26 women, 2 men)
- Byron and Jay, the bachelors, were both 40
- Average age of women was 32 (range 27-39)
60Attractiveness
- Most women in reality TV are considered average
or above average in appearance - This is what men favour (e.g., Buss 1989)
- Male physical attractiveness on reality TV is not
as consistent - This is also the pattern predicted by EP
61Personality
- Some men gain popularity via personality
- Bob (Bachelorette 1), slightly overweight, won
female fans because of genuineness and sense of
humour. He became the bachelor for Bachelor 4. - Adam Mesh (Average Joe 1) was so popular with
female fans he got his own show. Average Joe
Adam Returns
www.realitytvworld.com/averagejoe3/
62(No Transcript)
63Fidelity and Children
- 9/25 and 12/25 men stated they were loyal,
trustworthy, or honest in Bachelorette 1 and
3, respectively - On Bachelor 2 Aaron was bothered that one of the
final 3 women (Gwen) had been previously married
he didnt pick her - On Average Joe 3 Adam eliminated Brittany when
she told him she had a 6 year old son, stating it
would add one more element to the relationship
www.gwengiolia.com
www.wchstv.com/abc/ thebachelor/
community.realitytvworld.com
www.realitytvplanet.com