Nelson Leif D, Morrison Evan L
Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University, NY, USA.
Psychol Sci. 2005 Feb;16(2):167-73. doi: 10.1111/j.0956-7976.2005.00798.x.
Male preferences for female body weight follow a consistent cross-cultural pattern such that in cultures with scarce resources, heavier women are preferred, whereas in cultures with abundant resources, thinner women are preferred. We offer a social-cognitive account for these findings based on the individual experience of resource scarcity. In four studies (N=1,176), we explored the possibility that this cross-cultural relationship emerges at the individual level; that is, we investigated whether situational feelings of resource scarcity predict personal preferences within a single culture. We operationalized intraindividual resource scarcity through feelings of financial and caloric dissatisfaction. Accordingly, we hypothesized-and found-that men who feel either poor or hungry prefer heavier women than men who feel rich or full. We discuss these findings in terms of how patterns of cross-cultural norms may be evinced at the individual level through an implicit psychological mechanism.
男性对女性体重的偏好呈现出一种一致的跨文化模式,即在资源稀缺的文化中,更偏好体重较重的女性,而在资源丰富的文化中,更偏好较瘦的女性。基于资源稀缺的个人经历,我们为这些发现提供了一种社会认知解释。在四项研究(N = 1176)中,我们探讨了这种跨文化关系在个体层面出现的可能性;也就是说,我们调查了资源稀缺的情境感受是否能预测单一文化中的个人偏好。我们通过对财务和热量的不满情绪来操作化个体内部的资源稀缺。相应地,我们假设并发现,感到贫穷或饥饿的男性比感到富有或饱腹的男性更喜欢体重较重的女性。我们从跨文化规范模式如何通过一种隐性心理机制在个体层面得以体现的角度来讨论这些发现。