Rethinking what men and women want in a
partner
EVANSTON, Ill. --- When it comes to romantic
attraction men primarily are motivated by
good looks and women by earning power. At
least that’s what men and women have been
saying for a long time. Based on research
that dates back several decades, the widely
accepted notion permeates popular culture
today.
But those sex differences didn’t hold up in
a new in-depth study of romantic attraction
undertaken by two Northwestern University
psychologists.
In short, the data suggest that whether
you’re a man or a woman, being attractive is
just as good for your romantic prospects
and, to a lesser extent, so is being a good
earner.
“Sex Differences in Mate Preferences
Revisited: Do People Know What They
Initially Desire in a Romantic Partner"” was
published in the February issue of the
Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology.
For a month, the romantic lives of study
participants were scrutinized, including
their prospects within and outside of a
speed-dating event.
What people said and did in choosing
romantic partners were two different
matters.
“True to the stereotypes, the initial
self-reports of male participants indicated
that they cared more than women about a
romantic partner’s physical attractiveness,
and the women in the study stated more than
men that earning power was an aphrodisiac,”
said Paul Eastwick, lead author of the study
and graduate student in psychology in the
Weinberg School of Arts and Sciences at
Northwestern.
But in reality men and women were equally
inspired by physical attraction and equally
inspired by earning power or ambition.
“In other words good looks was the primary
stimulus of attraction for both men and
women, and a person with good earning
prospects or ambition tended to be liked as
well,” said Eli Finkel, assistant professor
of psychology at Northwestern.
“Most noteworthy, the earning-power effect
as well as the good-looks effect didn’t
differ for men and women.”
Participants’ preferences based on their
live romantic interactions contrasted with
the ideal sex-differentiated preferences
that they reported 10 days before the
speed-dating event.
“We found that the romantic dynamics that
occurred at the speed-dating event and
during the following 30-day period had
little to do with the sex-differentiated
preferences stated on the questionnaires,”
said Finkel.
The speed dating methodology gave the
researchers an opportunity not available to
earlier generations of researchers to
compare stated romantic preferences with
actual choices participants made about a
series of potential partners.
The discrepancy between what people did and
said in this dating situation fits with
other research that shows that people often
do a poor job explaining why they do things,
often referring to accepted cultural
theories to explain their own behavior.
The speed-dating methodology allowed the
Northwestern researchers to move beyond the
abstract world of romantic ideals to see how
people actually rated a number of
flesh-and-blood people regarding physical
attractiveness, ambition and earning power.
“If you were to tell me that you prefer
physically attractive romantic partners, I
would expect to see that you indeed are more
attracted to physically attractive
partners,” said Eastwick.
“But our participants didn’t pursue their
ideal in this way. This leads us to question
whether people know what they initially
value in a romantic partner.”
What about the academic argument that men
are primed much more than women to highly
value beauty in romantic partners in an
evolutionary quest for health, fertility and
preservation of the gene pool.
The new Northwestern research poses at least
as many questions as it answers about the
differences between the sexes. Is it
possible after all that, when it comes to
romantic attraction, men aren’t from Mars
and women aren’t from Venus"
The new study suggests that both sexes have
similar romantic responses to each other
right here on planet Earth.