Evolutionary explanation

Cards (9)

  • What is sexual selection?
    • Attributes or behaviours that increase reproductive success are passed on through genes, which depends on our chances of survival and our ability to attract a mate
    • Charles Darwin - females establish a preference for male characteristics that enhance reproductive success, putting males under pressure to improve that trait
    • Male goals are to outcompete their rivals, mate when it is ensured a child will be conceived, and ensure the child lives long enough to reproduce and pass their genes on
  • What is human reproductive behaviour and the goal of this?
    • Any behaviours relating to the opportunities to reproduce and increase the survival chances of our genes
    • Main goal is to reproduce and pass on their genes
  • What is anisogamy?What are the consequences of anisogamy?
    • The differences between male and female sex cells (gametes)
    • Female gametes (eggs) are larger in comparison, static, have limited years of fertility and invest a lot of time/energy into reproduction
    • Male gametes (sperm) are smaller, extremely mobile, have an infinite supply, and invest little time and energy into reproduction
    • Means fertile females are much rarer but there is no shortage of male mates
  • What is intersexual selection?
    • Strategies that males and females use to select each other - females select a genetically fit partner willing to provide
    • Trivers: consequences of wrong partner choices are more serious for females (due to rare eggs) so invest greater time/commitment
    • Female's preference determines which features are passed onto the offspring e.g. height will increase in males over generations
    • Fisher: 'sexy sons' hypothesis - females mate with males that have reproductive characteristics, inherited by their sons who are then more likely to be selected by females to mate
  • What is intrasexual selection?
    • Strategies within each sex to be the one that is selected
    • Competition between males to be selected by a female - winner reproduces passing on his victorious characteristics to offspring
    • Dimorphism: males and females look different e.g. size in men, young fertility in women (waist-to-hip ratio)
    • Behavioural consequences: men may act more aggressive to acquire fertile females and protect them from competing males, leading to selection of aggressive men
  • What evidence supports the role of female choosiness in intrasexual selection?
    • Clark & Hatfield (1989): sent male and female students on a university campus to approach others saying they found them attractive, asking them to go to bed with them the same night
    • 75% of males agreed, 0% of females
    • Shows females are choosier than men when selecting sexual partners evolving different strategies to ensure reproductive success -> supporting Trivers (1972)
  • What evidence supports intrasexual selection?
    • Buss (1989): surveyed 10k adults in 33 countries in attributes that the theory predicts to be important in partner preference
    • Females preferred resource-related, financial characteristics
    • Males value physical attractiveness and youth as signs of good reproductive capacity
    • Findings reflect consistent sex differences in partner preferences, supporting sexual selection theory
  • Why can cultural differences be just as important as evolutionary forces in gender differences with mate preference?
    • Kasser and Sharma (1999): analysed 37 cultures and found that women value resource-related characteristics in mates MORE in the cultures where women's status and educational opportunities are limited
    • Weakens evolutionary explanation, underestimating the role of social and economic factors in establishing mate preference patterns
  • Are female mate preferences for high-status men universal?
    • Buller (2005): majority of studies that attempt to determine female mate preferences were carried out on female undergrads
    • Their preference for high status men may just be a preference of men with similar interests or educational prospects to their own
    • Weakens evolutionary psychologists' claim that female preference for high status men is universal as this evidence is weak