Department of Psychology, Nipissing University, North Bay, Canada.
Department of Psychology, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Canada.
Evol Psychol. 2024 Jul-Sep;22(3):14747049241267226. doi: 10.1177/14747049241267226.
Jealousy may have evolved to motivate adaptive compensatory behavior in response to threats to a valued relationship. This suggests that jealousy follows a temporal sequence: A perceived relational threat induces state feelings of jealousy which in turn motivates compensatory behavior, such as mate retention effort. Yet to date, tests of this mediation model have been limited to cross-sectional data. This study is the first to experimentally test this theoretical model. Men and women (= 222) who were currently in committed romantic relationships were primed with an imagined partner infidelity (versus control) scenario. Participants then completed measures of state jealousy and intended mate retention behavior. Results found that those primed with the infidelity threat scenario experienced an increase in state jealousy, which in turn predicted more intended benefit-provisioning and cost-inflicting mate retention. Findings suggest that jealousy mediated the relationship between infidelity threat and intended mate retention behavior, supporting the evolutionary account of state jealousy.
嫉妒可能是为了激励适应性的补偿行为而进化的,以应对对有价值的关系的威胁。这表明嫉妒遵循一个时间顺序:感知到的关系威胁会引起嫉妒的状态感,而这种状态感又会激发补偿行为,如伴侣保留努力。然而,迄今为止,对这种中介模型的检验仅限于横断面数据。这项研究是第一个对这一理论模型进行实验检验的研究。目前处于承诺的浪漫关系中的男性和女性(=222)被想象中的伴侣不忠(与对照组)情景所激发。然后,参与者完成了状态嫉妒和意图伴侣保留行为的测量。结果发现,那些被不忠威胁情景激发的人经历了状态嫉妒的增加,而这种状态嫉妒反过来又预示着更多的意图提供利益和施加成本的伴侣保留。研究结果表明,嫉妒在不忠威胁和意图伴侣保留行为之间起中介作用,支持了状态嫉妒的进化解释。