Women's behavioural engagement with a masculine male heightens during the fertile window: evidence for the cycle shift hypothesis
Affiliations
- University of Leicester, School of Psychology, LE1 7EA Leicester, UK
Correspondence
- Corresponding author. School of Psychology, Forensic Section, University of Leicester, LE1 7EA Leicester, UK.
Correspondence information about the author Heather D. FloweAffiliations
- University of Leicester, School of Psychology, LE1 7EA Leicester, UK
Correspondence
- Corresponding author. School of Psychology, Forensic Section, University of Leicester, LE1 7EA Leicester, UK.
Affiliations
- University of Leicester, School of Psychology, LE1 7EA Leicester, UK
Affiliations
- University of Leicester, Department of Economics, LE1 7RH Leicester, UK
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Fig. 1
Mean response speed (+1 S.E.M.) plotted as a function of cycle phase and host masculinity.
Abstract
Previous research suggests that women may alter their behaviour during the fertile window of the menstrual cycle to attract a mate who has traits that indicate high-quality genes. We tested whether fertile women demonstrate greater behavioural engagement with a masculine compared to a less masculine male. The test was performed using a quiz show paradigm, in which a male host asked female participants general knowledge questions. The masculinity of the host was varied between participants. Women's performance on the quiz, as well as their romantic attraction to the host, was examined in relation to women's estimated cycle phase and host masculinity. Fertile compared to nonfertile women were more romantically attracted to the host and were faster to answer his questions, but only when he was portrayed as masculine. The results of the study are interpreted as being in keeping with Gangestad and Thornhill's cycle shift hypothesis (Menstrual cycle variation in women's preferences for the scent of symmetrical men. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences, 1998;265:727–733. doi:10.1098/rspb.1998.03801998).
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☆Author note: We are indebted to Martie Haselton and the anonymous reviewers for their invaluable comments on earlier versions of this article.
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