Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
890923 | Personality and Individual Differences | 2013 | 6 Pages |
A study (n = 411) investigated the relationship between chronic individual differences in germ aversion and sociosexual attitudes (short-term mating orientation, long-term mating orientation, and anticipated future sexual promiscuity), and also tested whether the magnitudes of these relations differ depending on the temporary perceptual salience of disease threat. Results revealed person-by-situation interactions. When the threat of disease was temporarily salient, germ aversion correlated negatively with short-term mating orientation and with future sexual promiscuity, and correlated positively with long-term mating orientation; these effects were either weaker or nonexistent under control conditions. These effects emerged most clearly among women.
► We investigate the effects of dispositional germ aversion on sexual attitudes. ► We investigate the effects of temporary disease salience on sexual attitudes. ► Germ aversion more strongly predicts sexual attitudes when disease is salient. ► These effects emerge most clearly for women.