Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
891205 | Personality and Individual Differences | 2012 | 5 Pages |
Previous research suggests men are sexually attracted to women displaying cues to sexual exploitability. During human evolutionary history, men’s agreeableness, orientation towards casual sex, and relationship status may have been recurrently associated with greater net benefits of pursuing a sexually exploitative strategy. We hypothesized these three individual differences would predict men’s perceptions of women’s sexual exploitability. Seventy-two men viewed photographs of women and rated their sexual exploitability. Men’s agreeableness, sociosexual orientation, and current relationship status interacted to predict their perceptions of women’s sexual exploitability; among unmated men, the combination of low agreeableness and an orientation toward uncommitted sex was associated with higher perceptions of women’s sexual exploitability. This suggests mechanisms motivating sexually exploitative strategies may depend on an interaction between personality characteristics and situational variables.
► We test how personality traits among men predict sexually exploitative motivations. ► Low agreeableness among men predicted greater sexually exploitative motivations. ► An unrestricted sociosexual orientation predicted greater exploitative motivations. ► These traits interacted with a situational variable to predict these motivations.