How Are Mate Preferences Linked with Actual Mate Selection? Tests of Mate Preference Integration Algorithms Using Computer Simulations and Actual Mating Couples
Authored by Daniel Conroy-Beam, David M Buss
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156078
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
http://www.plosone.org/article/fetchSingleRepresentation.action?uri=info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0156078.s011
Abstract
Prior mate preference research has focused on the content of mate
preferences. Yet in real life, people must select mates among potentials
who vary along myriad dimensions. How do people incorporate information
on many different mate preferences in order to choose which partner to
pursue? Here, in Study 1, we compare seven candidate algorithms for
integrating multiple mate preferences in a competitive agent-based model
of human mate choice evolution. This model shows that a Euclidean
algorithm is the most evolvable solution to the problem of selecting
fitness-beneficial mates. Next, across three studies of actual couples
(Study 2: n = 214; Study 3: n = 259; Study 4: n = 294) we apply the
Euclidean algorithm toward predicting mate preference fulfillment
overall and preference fulfillment as a function of mate value.
Consistent with the hypothesis that mate preferences are integrated
according to a Euclidean algorithm, we find that actual mates lie close
in multidimensional preference space to the preferences of their
partners. Moreover, this Euclidean preference fulfillment is greater for
people who are higher in mate value, highlighting
theoretically-predictable individual differences in who gets what they
want. These new Euclidean tools have important implications for
understanding real-world dynamics of mate selection.
Tags
Model
evolutionary
Strategies
Sex-differences