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Attraction and Relationships

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Title: Attraction and Relationships


1
Attraction and Relationships
2
Thin slicing How first impressions matter
  • Judging personality traits (Willis Todorov,
    2006)
  • Ppts. saw pictures of faces at various durations
  • Attractiveness, likeability, competence,
    trustworthiness, aggressiveness
  • 1/10 of a second correlated with judgments
    without time limits
  • Strongest results for trustworthiness
  • In another study ppts predict winning and
    loosing political candidates from pictures

3
Thin slicing How first impressions matter
  • Teacher evaluations (Ambady Rosenthal, 1993)
  • 10, 5, 2 sec. long videotape of profs teaching
  • predicted student evaluations at the end of term

4
Thin slicing How first impressions matter
  • Do people agree on first impressions?
  • Yes
  • The 1 million chicken-egg question

5
Lecture Outline
  • 1) The Psychology of attraction
  • Propinquity
  • Similarity
  • Physical attractiveness
  • Mate preferences

6
Propinquity
  • Physical proximity encourages liking,
    friendships, and romance
  • Police Academy study

7
Fig. 3.2
8
Propinquity
  • Explanations of Propinquity Effects
  • Availability encourages interactions
  • Anticipating Interactions produces warm feelings
  • The Mere Exposure Effect repeated exposure
    breeds familiarity, which encourages liking

9
Fig. 3.3
Turkish words examples kadirga, afworbu, lokanta
10
Mere Exposure Effect
  • Does not need conscious reflectionsame effect
    with subliminal exposure
  • One psychological factor as to why advertising
    works

11
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12
Similarity
  • Similarity breeds attraction
  • birds of a feather
  • Engaged couples study
  • Bogus Stranger studies
  • What about opposites attract? Yes, few exceptions
  • Sexual attraction
  • A few personality traits (dominant/submissive,
    talkative/quiet, nurturing/needy

13
Why Does Similarity Encourage Attraction?
  • Social validation
  • Smooth social interactions
  • We Expect Similar Others to Like Us
  • Similar Others Have Qualities We Like

14
Physical Attractiveness Important feature of
first impressions
  • Halo effect belief that attractive people
    possess other positive qualities
  • Attractive people earn more
  • Attractive defendants are less likely to be
    convicted, and receive lighter sentences
  • Men more likely to come to aid of attractive
    females
  • Essays attributed to attractive author evaluated
    more favorably
  • Etc.

15
Origins of Physical Attractiveness
  • Is it arbitrary cultural convention or are there
    innate preferences?
  • Cultural aspect 1 Thinness

16
Origins of Physical Attractiveness
  • Is it arbitrary cultural convention or are there
    innate preferences?
  • Cultural aspect 1 Thinness
  • Cultural aspect 2 Skin tone

17
Origins of Physical Attractiveness
  • Innate aspect
  • Babies look longer at what adults consider to be
    attractive faces
  • Video clip
  • Cross cultural agreement on attractive faces

18
Origins of Physical Attractiveness
  • Innate architecture of physical attractiveness
  • Bilateral symmetry (facial and bodily) is
    attractive
  • Average faces are attractive (Langlois Roggman,
    1990)
  • Healthy skin is attractive
  • In general, features that were associated with
    reproductive health in the ancestral environment
    are considered attractive

19
Mate Preferences (rank) by gender in 37 cultures
  • Trait M F
  • Mutual attraction 1 1
  • Dependable character 2 2
  • Maturity 3 3
  • Good health 5 7
  • Sociability 7 6
  • Good looks 10 13

20
Gender Differences in Mate Preferences
  • There are reliable gender differences in mate
    preferences--drum rolls, please
  • On average, men prefer physical attractiveness
    and youth more than women
  • On average, women prefer status and older age
    more than men
  • Warning the naturalistic fallacy

21
Largest and Smallest gender differences
  • Chastity Large cultural variation and unreliable
    or no gender differences
  • Good financial prospects large gender
    differences and little cultural variation

22
Gender Differences in Mate Preferences
  • Parental investment theory
  • Evolution has instilled in men and women desires
    that are advantageous to their reproductive
    success
  • Biologically, women invest more in their
    offspring then men
  • Women are the choosier gender in humans
  • Women should prefer men with resources
  • Men should prefer fertility (youthful appearance)

23
Gender Differences in Mate Preferences
  • Is the parental investment predictions anything
    more than common sense?
  • cross-species comparisons (the Panamanian
    poison-arrow frog, hyenas, emperor penguins)
  • Cross culturally universal
  • but also large cultural variationoverall more
    cultural differences than gender differences
  • Gender inequality correlated with the size of
    the gender difference in preference for status
    (Eagly and Wood)

24
Gender Differences in Mate Preferences
  • Is the parental investment predictions anything
    more than common sense?
  • Ovulating women find masculine men more
    attractive
  • but this is not exactly derived from parental
    investment theory

25
Some Conclusions about Gender Differences in Mate
Preferences
  • Systematic average gender differences predicted
    by parental investment theory
  • Cultural context plays more important role than
    gender for all other traits
  • Complex interaction of life history, culture, and
    gender-specific preferences
  • Naturalistic fallacyevolutionary explanation is
    not moral justification!

26
Lecture Outline
  • 2) The Psychology of relationships
  • Passionate and companionate love
  • Marriage

27
Passionate vs. companionate love (Berscheild
Walster)
  • Passionate love
  • Intense longing, ecstasy/despair
  • Intense but brief
  • Like a drug, a burning fire
  • Companionate love
  • Feelings of intimacy, care, connection
  • Slow growing but long lasting
  • Like vines growing and intertwining, binding
  • The myth of eternal passion

28
Love and Marriage across Cultures (Levine et al,
1995)
  • If a man (woman) had all other qualities you
    desired, would you marry this person if you were
    not in love? ( AGREE)

Patna, Fresno, Birm, Kyoto HK India Calif UK JP
49 3.5 7.3 2.3 5.8
29
Love and Marriage across Cultures (Levine et al,
1995)
  • If love has completely disappeared from a
    marriage, OK for couple to make a clean break and
    start new lives? ( AGREE)

Patna, Fresno, Birm, Kyoto HK India Calif UK JP
46 35 45 41 47
30
Two Loves, Two Errors
Danger points
Intensity
Passionate
Companionate
Time (6 months)
From Haidt, The Happiness Hypothesis
31
The Longer Term Picture
Companionate
Intensity
Passionate
Time (60 years)
From Haidt, The Happiness Hypothesis
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