Automatic Attention towards Face or Body as a Function of Mating Motivation

Because women's faces and bodies carry different cues of reproductive value, men may attend to different perceptual cues as functions of their long-term versus short-term mating motivations. We tested this hypothesis in three experiments on 135 male and 132 female participants. When influenced...

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Main Authors: Hui Jing Lu, Lei Chang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-01-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491201000113
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spelling doaj-c5abe29ea38343c8ae939b9492ed8bf62020-11-25T03:34:06ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492012-01-011010.1177/14747049120100011310.1177_147470491201000113Automatic Attention towards Face or Body as a Function of Mating MotivationHui Jing LuLei ChangBecause women's faces and bodies carry different cues of reproductive value, men may attend to different perceptual cues as functions of their long-term versus short-term mating motivations. We tested this hypothesis in three experiments on 135 male and 132 female participants. When influenced by short-term rather than long-term mating motivations, men's attention was captured by (Study 1), was shifted to (Study 2), and was distracted by (Study 3) the waist/hip area rather than the face on photographs of attractive women. Similar effects were not found among the female participants in response to photographs of attractive men. These results support the evolutionary view that, similar to the attentional selectivity found in other domains of life, male perceptual attention has evolved to selectively capture and hold reproductive information about the opposite sex as a function of short-term versus long-term mating goals.https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491201000113
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hui Jing Lu
Lei Chang
spellingShingle Hui Jing Lu
Lei Chang
Automatic Attention towards Face or Body as a Function of Mating Motivation
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Hui Jing Lu
Lei Chang
author_sort Hui Jing Lu
title Automatic Attention towards Face or Body as a Function of Mating Motivation
title_short Automatic Attention towards Face or Body as a Function of Mating Motivation
title_full Automatic Attention towards Face or Body as a Function of Mating Motivation
title_fullStr Automatic Attention towards Face or Body as a Function of Mating Motivation
title_full_unstemmed Automatic Attention towards Face or Body as a Function of Mating Motivation
title_sort automatic attention towards face or body as a function of mating motivation
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Because women's faces and bodies carry different cues of reproductive value, men may attend to different perceptual cues as functions of their long-term versus short-term mating motivations. We tested this hypothesis in three experiments on 135 male and 132 female participants. When influenced by short-term rather than long-term mating motivations, men's attention was captured by (Study 1), was shifted to (Study 2), and was distracted by (Study 3) the waist/hip area rather than the face on photographs of attractive women. Similar effects were not found among the female participants in response to photographs of attractive men. These results support the evolutionary view that, similar to the attentional selectivity found in other domains of life, male perceptual attention has evolved to selectively capture and hold reproductive information about the opposite sex as a function of short-term versus long-term mating goals.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491201000113
work_keys_str_mv AT huijinglu automaticattentiontowardsfaceorbodyasafunctionofmatingmotivation
AT leichang automaticattentiontowardsfaceorbodyasafunctionofmatingmotivation
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