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Solving mate shortages: Lowering standards, searching farther, and abstaining.
Author(s) -
Peter K. Jonason,
Simone L. Betes,
Norman P. Li
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
evolutionary behavioral sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.604
H-Index - 14
eISSN - 2330-2933
pISSN - 2330-2925
DOI - 10.1037/ebs0000174
Subject(s) - psychology , economic shortage , social psychology , cognitive psychology , developmental psychology , government (linguistics) , linguistics , philosophy
Although much work on mating psychology has focused on mate preferences and responses to desirable sexual and romantic offers, less is known about what happens when individuals face a lack of mating options. We present 2 studies on (hypothetical) compensatory mating tactics. In Study 1 (N 299), participants were asked to imagine they were struggling to find long-term and short-term mates and we revealed sex differences and context-specific effects consistent with parental investment theory. In Study 2 (N 282), participants were asked to imagine they had been incapable of finding a short-term and long-term mate for 6 months despite actively trying to find one and then report the likelihood of abstaining, lowering their standards, and traveling farther to find a satisfactory partner; results largely (and conceptually) replicated those from Study 1 but document the role of attachment and (self-reported) mate value in accounting for individual differences in adopting the 3 mating tactics. We frame our results in terms of how people might solve mate shortages.

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