The Oklahoma Center for Evolutionary Analysis (OCEAN), Department of Psychology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, USA.
School of Psychology, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Nat Hum Behav. 2021 Jun;5(6):726-735. doi: 10.1038/s41562-020-01038-9. Epub 2021 Jan 25.
After half a century of debate and few empirical tests, there remains no consensus concerning why ovulation in human females is considered concealed. The predominant male investment hypothesis states that females were better able to obtain material investment from male partners across those females' ovulatory cycles by concealing ovulation. We build on recent work on female competition to propose and investigate an alternative-the female rivalry hypothesis-that concealed ovulation benefited females by allowing them to avoid aggression from other females. Using an agent-based model of mating behaviour and paternal investment in a human ancestral environment, we did not find strong support for the male investment hypothesis, but found support for the female rivalry hypothesis. Our results suggest that concealed ovulation may have benefitted females in navigating their intrasexual social relationships. More generally, this work implies that explicitly considering female-female interactions may inspire additional insights into female behaviour and physiology.
经过半个世纪的争论和为数不多的实证检验,关于为什么人类女性的排卵被认为是隐蔽的,仍然没有共识。占主导地位的雄性投资假说认为,女性通过隐蔽排卵,在其排卵周期中,能够更好地从雄性伴侣那里获得物质投资。我们基于最近关于雌性竞争的研究,提出并研究了另一种假说——雌性竞争假说,即隐蔽排卵使女性受益,因为它使她们能够避免来自其他女性的攻击。我们使用人类祖先环境中的交配行为和父系投资的基于主体的模型,没有发现对雄性投资假说的有力支持,但对雌性竞争假说提供了支持。我们的研究结果表明,隐蔽排卵可能使女性在处理其同性社会关系方面受益。更广泛地说,这项工作表明,明确考虑雌性之间的相互作用可能会激发对雌性行为和生理学的更多见解。