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Article

Chinese and UK participants' preferences for physical attractiveness and social status in potential mates

Details

Citation

Zhang L, Wang H, Lee AJ, DeBruine LM & Jones BC (2019) Chinese and UK participants' preferences for physical attractiveness and social status in potential mates. Royal Society Open Science, 6 (11), Art. No.: 181243. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.181243

Abstract
Men are hypothesized to show stronger preferences for physical attractiveness in potential mates than women are, particularly when assessing the attractiveness of potential mates for short- term relationships. By contrast, women are thought to show stronger preferences for social status in potential mates than men are, particularly when assessing the attractiveness of potential mates for long-term relationships. These mate-preference sex differences are often claimed to be ‘universal’ (i.e. stable across cultures). Consequently, we used an established ‘budget- allocation’ task to investigate Chinese and UK participants’ preferences for physical attractiveness and social status in potential mates. Confirmatory analyses replicated these sex differences in both samples, consistent with the suggestion that they occur in diverse cultures. However, confirmatory analyses also showed that Chinese women had stronger preferences for social status than UK women did, suggesting cultural differences in the magnitude of mate-preference sex differences can also occur.

Keywords
attractiveness; social status; mate preferences; culture

Journal
Royal Society Open Science: Volume 6, Issue 11

StatusPublished
FundersH2020 European Research Council
Publication date30/11/2019
Publication date online20/11/2019
Date accepted by journal23/10/2019
URL
PublisherThe Royal Society
eISSN2054-5703

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Dr Anthony Lee

Dr Anthony Lee

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology

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