Mate Scarcity Effects on Women’s Wariness of Other Women. Jovana
Vukovic, Rudy Jean-Bart, Daniela Branson, Jason Zephir, Alexandra
Wright. EvoS Journal, Jul 2019.
http://evostudies.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Vukovic-et-al_Vol10SpIss1.pdf
Abstract:
Previous studies have found that the scarcity of potential mates in the
environment may influence mate-choice relevant behaviors, including
intrasexual competition. In the current study, we investigated the
relationship between the scarcity of Black men and women’s perceptions
of other women (i.e., potential competitors). Since Black men are
factually scarce in Broward County, we predicted that women who believe
that Black men are scarce may hold less favorable opinions of other
women (i.e., potential competitors). We interpreted attitudes of
wariness toward other women as likely proxies to intrasexual
competition. Our results show that women who believe that desirable
mates are hard to come by, tend to be warier of women in general. We
also found a negative correlation between wariness of women and reported
number of good female friends. These results are consistent with
previous findings suggesting heightened intrasexual competition when
competition for desirable mates is high due to a sex ratio imbalance.
KEYWORDS: Sex Ratio Imbalance, Intrasexual Competition, Female Friendship, Mate Scarcity
Part of the survey:
Rate the following statements on a scale from 1 (disagree strongly) to 10 (agree strongly):
Women are vengeful.
Women are competitive.
Women make good best friends.
I trust other women.
I feel more defensive around women than I do men.
I feel more comfortable around men than I do around women.
I am sometimes jealous of my female friends.
In the past, I have gossiped about a female friend who was flirting with the person I liked in a romantic way.
In the past, I started a rumor to get back at a friend who flirted with the person I liked in a romantic way.
Wednesday, July 17, 2019
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