The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
University of Stirling, Scotland.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2024 Apr;50(4):587-596. doi: 10.1177/01461672221135955. Epub 2022 Dec 21.
Individuals are thought to seek the best possible romantic partner in exchange for their own desirability. We investigated whether individuals' self-evaluations were related to their partner choices and whether the accuracy of these self-evaluations was associated with mating outcomes. Participants ( = 1,354) took part in a speed-dating study where they rated themselves and others on mate value and indicated their willingness to date each potential partner. Individuals were somewhat accurate in their self-evaluations, and these self-evaluations were associated with individuals' revealed minimum and maximum standards for a potential partner, but not the number of partners they were interested in. Participants who overestimated their mate value were accepted by an equivalent number of partners compared with under-estimators, but the over-estimators were choosier and thus ended up with fewer (but similarly attractive) reciprocal matches. Results support social exchange theory and the matching hypothesis, and contrast findings that self-enhancement facilitates positive social outcomes.
个体被认为会寻求最佳的浪漫伴侣,以换取自身的吸引力。我们研究了个体的自我评价是否与他们的伴侣选择有关,以及这些自我评价的准确性是否与交配结果有关。参与者(n=1354)参加了一项速配研究,他们对自己和他人的伴侣价值进行了评价,并表示愿意与每个潜在伴侣约会。个体在自我评价方面有些准确,这些自我评价与个体对潜在伴侣的最低和最高标准有关,但与他们感兴趣的伴侣数量无关。与低估自己伴侣价值的个体相比,高估自己伴侣价值的个体被同等数量的伴侣接受,但高估者更挑剔,因此最终的(但同样有吸引力的)互惠匹配数量较少。研究结果支持社会交换理论和匹配假设,与自我提升促进积极社会结果的发现形成对比。