Contrasting Computational Models of Mate Preference Integration Across 45 Countries.
Author
Ertugrul, Berna
Ponciano, Edna
Popa, Camelia
Prokop, Pavol
Rizwan, Muhammad
Sainz, Mario
Salkicevic, Svjetlana
Sargautyte, Ruta
Sarmany-Schuller, Ivan
Schmehl, Susanne
Sharad, Shivantika
Siddiqui, Razi Sultan
Simonetti, Franco
Stoyanova, Stanislava Yordanova
Tadinac, Meri
Varella, Marco Antonio Correa
Vauclair, Christin-Melanie
Diego Vega, Luis
Widarini, Dwi Ajeng
Yoo, Gyesook
Zat'kova, Marta
Zupancic, Maja
Duyar, İzzet
Ozener, Baris
Duyar, Derya
Conroy-Beam, Daniel
Buss, David M.
Asao, Kelly
Sorokowska, Agnieszka
Sorokowski, Piotr
Aavik, Toivo
Akello, Grace
Alhabahba, Mohammad Madallh
Alm, Charlotte
Amjad, Naumana
Anjum, Afifa
Atama, Chiemezie S.
Ayebare, Richard
Batres, Carlota
Bendixen, Mons
Bensafia, Aicha
Bizumic, Boris
Boussena, Mahmoud
Butovskaya, Marina
Can, Seda
Cantarero, Katarzyna
Carrier, Antonin
Cetinkaya, Hakan
Croy, Ilona
Maria Cueto, Rosa
Czub, Marcin
Dronova, Daria
Dural, Seda
Espinosa, Agustin
Estevan, Ignacio
Esteves, Carla Sofia
Fang, Luxi
Frackowiak, Tomasz
Contreras Garduno, Jorge
Ugalde Gonzalez, Karina
Guemaz, Farida
Gyuris, Petra
Halamova, Maria
Herak, Iskra
Horvat, Marina
Hromatko, Ivana
Hui, Chin-Ming
Jaafar, Jas Laile
Jiang, Feng
Kafetsios, Konstantinos
Kavcic, Tina
Kennair, Leif Edward Ottesen
Kervyn, Nicolas
Truong Thi Khanh Ha, Truong Thi Khanh Ha
Khilji, Imran Ahmed
Kobis, Nils C.
Hoang Moc Lan, Hoang Moc Lan
Lang, Andras
Lennard, Georgina R.
Leon, Ernesto
Lindholm, Torun
Trinh Thi Linh, Trinh Thi Linh
Lopez, Giulia
Van Luot, Nguyen
Mailhos, Alvaro
Manesi, Zoi
Martinez, Rocio
McKerchar, Sarah L.
Mesko, Norbert
Misra, Girishwar
Monaghan, Conal
Mora, Emanuel C.
Moya-Garofano, Alba
Musil, Bojan
Natividade, Jean Carlos
Niemczyk, Agnieszka
Nizharadze, George
Oberzaucher, Elisabeth
Oleszkiewicz, Anna
Omar-Fauzee, Mohd Sofian
Onyishi, Ike E.
Pagani, Ariela Francesca
Pakalniskiene, Vilmante
Parise, Miriam
Pazhoohi, Farid
Pisanski, Annette
Pisanski, Katarzyna
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Show full item recordAbstract
Humans express a wide array of ideal mate preferences. Around the world, people desire romantic partners who are intelligent, healthy, kind, physically attractive, wealthy, and more. In order for these ideal preferences to guide the choice of actual romantic partners, human mating psychology must possess a means to integrate information across these many preference dimensions into summaries of the overall mate value of their potential mates. Here we explore the computational design of this mate preference integration process using a large sample of n = 14,487 people from 45 countries around the world. We combine this large cross-cultural sample with agent-based models to compare eight hypothesized models of human mating markets. Across cultures, people higher in mate value appear to experience greater power of choice on the mating market in that they set higher ideal standards, better fulfill their preferences in choice, and pair with higher mate value partners. Furthermore, we find that this cross-culturally universal pattern of mate choice is most consistent with a Euclidean model of mate preference integration.
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