Department of Psychology, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA, United States of America.
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Aug 4;16(8):e0254725. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0254725. eCollection 2021.
Evolutionary psychology has emerged as a controversial discipline, particularly with regard to its claims concerning the biological basis of sex differences in human mate preferences. Drawing on theories of motivated inference, we hypothesized that those who are most likely to be privileged by specific aspects of the theory would be most likely to support the theory. In particular, we predicted that physical attractiveness would be positively associated with endorsement of predictions of evolutionary psychology concerning mating strategies. Two studies confirmed this hypothesis. In Study 1, participants rated as higher in physical attractiveness were more likely to support specific principles of evolutionary psychology. In Study 2, a manipulation designed to boost self-perceived physical attractiveness increased endorsement of those same principles. Observer-rated physical attractiveness generally predicted individuals' support of the theoretical principles better than did gender, political orientation, or self-esteem. Results suggest that those most likely to benefit according to certain predictions of evolutionary psychology are also those most likely to be sympathetic toward its relevant principles.
进化心理学已经成为一个有争议的学科,特别是在其关于人类配偶偏好的性别差异的生物学基础的主张方面。基于动机推理理论,我们假设那些最有可能从该理论的特定方面受益的人最有可能支持该理论。特别是,我们预测,吸引力与对进化心理学关于交配策略的预测的支持呈正相关。两项研究证实了这一假设。在研究 1 中,被评为吸引力更高的参与者更有可能支持进化心理学的具体原则。在研究 2 中,一种旨在提高自我感知吸引力的操纵增加了对这些相同原则的认可。观察者评定的吸引力通常比性别、政治取向或自尊更好地预测个体对理论原则的支持。研究结果表明,那些根据进化心理学的某些预测最有可能受益的人,也是最有可能对其相关原则表示同情的人。