Culture shapes sex differences in mate preferences

IF 3 1区 心理学 Q1 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Nechumi Malovicki-Yaffe , Adam E. Tratner , Melissa M. McDonald
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Abstract

The tendency for women, relative to men, to more strongly prefer mates with good financial prospects has been reliably documented across a variety of cultures. Malovicki-Yaffe et al. (2018) provided data to the contrary, demonstrating that Haredi women of the ultra-Orthodox community in Israel care little for a wealthy partner. They reported no significant sex difference in ratings of a partner's economic prospects, and a reversal for trait rankings, such that men rated a woman's earning capacity as more important than women did. These findings illustrate that status is culturally determined. The most conservative members of the ultra-Orthodox community in Israel endorse a sociocultural agreement in which women enter the workforce as the breadwinner to enable men to devote their time to religious pursuits. As a consequence, little power can be earned by men for their wealth, but is instead presumed to be conferred by their status as a religious scholar. Women's preferences follow suit, with a strong desire to acquire a highly intelligent and educated religious scholar as a mate. This sociocultural arrangement is still practiced within the ultra-Orthodox community, but recent shifts toward modernization in religious beliefs among some sects provide an opportunity to build on past research in three ways (1) replicate the reversed sex difference in mate preferences for economic prospects with a larger and more religiously varied sample (N = 1414 via an online Haredi Panel, Study 1), (2) examine whether the sex-reversed effect is weaker among those who have shifted to more modern religious beliefs (Study 1), and (3) validate the underlying assumptions made by past work with respect to how Haredi men and women earn power (N = 949 via online convenience sampling, Study 2). The results document a sex reversal in mate rankings and ratings for economic prospects, demonstrate that this effect is strongest among the most religiously conservative Haredi people, and confirm that men's strongest source of power in the ultra-Orthodox community is their role as a Torah scholar—eclipsing the impact of wealth. Additionally, we demonstrate the stability of men's preferences for a young and attractive partner, and explore whether women's role as an economic breadwinner translates into power in the home or community.

文化决定交配偏好的性别差异
与男性相比,女性更倾向于选择经济前景好的伴侣,这一点在各种文化中都有可靠的记录。Malovicki-Yaffe 等人(2018 年)提供了相反的数据,证明以色列极端正统派社区的 Haredi 妇女很少在乎富有的伴侣。他们报告说,对伴侣经济前景的评价没有明显的性别差异,特质排名则相反,男性对女性赚钱能力的评价比女性更重要。这些发现说明,地位是由文化决定的。以色列极端东正教最保守的成员赞同一种社会文化协议,即女性作为养家糊口的人加入劳动力大军,以使男性能够将时间用于宗教追求。因此,男性几乎无法通过财富获得权力,而只能通过宗教学者的身份获得权力。女性的喜好也是如此,她们强烈希望获得一位高智商、高学历的宗教学者作为伴侣。这种社会文化安排在极端东正教社区中仍在实行,但最近一些教派的宗教信仰向现代化转变,这为我们提供了一个机会,在过去研究的基础上,从以下三个方面进行研究:(1)通过一个更大、宗教信仰更多样的样本(通过在线 Haredi 小组,样本数 = 1414),复制在经济前景方面配偶偏好的性别差异逆转;(2)通过一个在线 Haredi 小组,研究在经济前景方面配偶偏好的性别差异逆转;(3)通过一个在线 Haredi 小组,研究在经济前景方面配偶偏好的性别差异逆转、研究 1),(2) 检验性别逆转效应在那些转向更现代宗教信仰的人群中是否更弱(研究 1),(3) 验证过去研究中关于哈雷迪族男性和女性如何获得权力的基本假设(通过在线便利抽样,样本数 = 949,研究 2)。研究结果记录了配偶排名和经济前景评价中的性别逆转,证明这种效应在宗教信仰最保守的哈里迪人中最强,并证实在极端正统派社区中,男性最强大的权力来源是他们作为托拉学者的角色--削弱了财富的影响。此外,我们还证明了男性对年轻且有吸引力的伴侣的偏好具有稳定性,并探讨了女性作为经济支柱的角色是否会转化为家庭或社区中的权力。
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来源期刊
Evolution and Human Behavior
Evolution and Human Behavior 生物-行为科学
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
9.80%
发文量
62
审稿时长
82 days
期刊介绍: Evolution and Human Behavior is an interdisciplinary journal, presenting research reports and theory in which evolutionary perspectives are brought to bear on the study of human behavior. It is primarily a scientific journal, but submissions from scholars in the humanities are also encouraged. Papers reporting on theoretical and empirical work on other species will be welcome if their relevance to the human animal is apparent.
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