Authors
Andreas Wilke, John MC Hutchinson, Peter M Todd, Daniel J Kruger
Publication date
2006
Journal
Evolutionary Psychology
Volume
4
Pages
367-393
Description
More frequent risk taking among young men than women has been explained as a sexually selected trait, perhaps advertising male quality. We investigated this hypothesis in three studies. (1) Young men and women rated how attractive they would find it if a potential partner took various specific risks. A domain-specific risk inventory allowed us to distinguish whether risk taking is attractive generally or only in certain domains. Both sexes reported social and recreational risk taking as attractive (the latter not always significantly so), but other domains of risk taking as unattractive (ethics, gambling, and health) or neutral (investment). The sexes differed markedly little. Parallel studies in Germany and the United States yielded very similar results. (2) We asked subjects to predict how attractive the other sex would find it if the subject performed each risky behavior. Both sexes were rather accurate (which could be merely …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Wilke, JMC Hutchinson, PM Todd, DJ Kruger - Evolutionary Psychology, 2006