Huberman Lab - Dr. David Buss: How Humans Select & Keep Romantic Partners in Short & Long Term
Episode Date: November 29, 2021In this episode, my guest is Dr. David Buss, Professor of Psychology at the University of Texas, Austin, and one of the founding members of the field of evolutionary psychology. Dr. Buss describes his... work on how people select mates for short and long-term relationships, the dynamics of human courtship, and mate value assessment — meaning how people measure up as potential partners. We also discuss the causes of infidelity and differences for infidelity in men and women. He explains how people evaluate and try to alter other people’s mate value as a means to secure and even poach mates. We discuss monogamous and non-monogamous relationships in humans. And we discuss what Dr. Buss calls “the dark triad”— features common in stalkers and narcissists that relate to sexual and psychological violence in relationships. This episode is sure to be of interest to anyone single or in a relationship who seeks to know how people select mates and anyone who is interested in forming and maintaining healthy romantic partnerships. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Introducing Dr. David Buss (00:04:27) Sponsors: AG1, LMNT (00:08:33) Choosing a Mate (00:13:40) Long Term Mates: Universal Desires (00:18:31) What Women & Men Seek in Long-Term Mates (00:25:10) Age Differences & Mating History (00:32:20) Deception in Courtship (00:37:30) Emotional Stability (00:38:40) Lying About Long-Term Interest (00:41:56) Short-Term Mating Criteria, Sliding Standards & Context Effects (00:46:25) Sexual Infidelity: Variety Seeking & (Un)happiness & Mate Switching (00:54:25) Genetic Cuckolds, How Ovulation Impacts Mate Preference (00:57:00) Long-Term vs. Short-Term Cheating, Concealment (00:59:15) Emotional & Financial Infidelity (01:04:35) Contraception (01:06:22) Status & Mating Success (01:10:10) Jealousy, Mate Value Discrepancies, Vigilance, Violence (01:24:13) Specificity of Intimate Partner Violence (01:25:12) Mate Retention Tactics: Denigration, Guilt, Etc. (01:27:33) Narcissism, Machiavellianism, Psychopathy (01:33:25) Stalking (01:39:15) Influence of Children on Mate Value Assessments (01:43:24) Attachment Styles, Mate Choice & Infidelity (01:46:40) Non-Monogamy, Unconventional Relationships (01:54:00) Mate Value Self Evaluation, Anxiety About the Truth (02:02:12) Self Deception (02:05:35) The Future of Evolutionary Psychology & Neuroscience (02:06:56) Books: When Men Behave Badly; The Evolution of Desire, Textbooks (02:10:42) Concluding Statements, Zero-Cost Support: Subscribe, Sponsors, Supplements Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Uberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and
Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. My guest today is Dr. David Bus. Dr. Bus is a professor of psychology at the University of Texas
Austin and he is one of the founding members and luminaries in the field of evolutionary psychology. Dr. Buses' laboratory is responsible for understanding
the strategies that humans use to select mates in the short and long term, and he is an
expert in sex differences in mating strategy. His laboratory is explored, for instance,
why women cheat on their spouses or their long-term partners,
as well as why men tend to cheat on their spouses and long-term partners.
He's also explored a number of things related to the courtship dance that we call dating
and securing a mate, including the use of deception related to proclamations of love or promises
of finances or sexual activity.
Dr. Buses Laboratory has also evaluated how
status is assessed, meaning how we evaluate our own worth and our potential as a mate, and who is,
let's just say, within range of a potential mate, both in the short and long term. For instance,
today we talk about how people don't just make direct assessments of their own
and other people's value as a potential mate, but also using the assessments of others to indirectly
determine whether or not they stand a chance or not in securing somebody as a short or long-term
mate. His laboratory has also focused on some of the complicated and varied emotions related to
mating love in relationships, such as lust and jealousy.
And he's extensively explored something called mate poaching, or the various strategies
that men and women use to make sure that the person that they want to be with, or the
person they are with, is not with anyone else, or seeking anyone else, and indeed that
other people don't seek their mate.
Dr. Bus's work also relates to how biological influences,
such as ovulation or time within the menstrual cycle,
influences mate selection or tendency to have sex
or not with a potential short or long-term mate.
And more recent work from Dr. Bus's laboratory focuses
on the darker aspects of mating and sexual behavior in humans,
including stalking and sexual behavior in humans, including
stalking and sexual violence.
Today, we discuss all those topics.
We also discuss some of the strategies that humans can use to make healthy mate selection
choices and for those that are already in committed relationships to ensure healthy progression
of those committed relationships.
In addition to publishing dozens of landmark scientific studies,
Dr. Bus has authored many important books.
A few of those include the evolution of desire
and why women have sex.
And his most recent book is the one that I'm reading now,
which is called When Men Behave Badly,
the Hidden Roots of Sexual Deception,
harassment, and assault.
And it's an absolutely fascinating read. It has endorsements from Dr. Robert Sapolsky,
Professor at Stanford, who's been on this podcast
as a guest before, as well as Steven Pinker,
and Jonathan Hate, who wrote the Coddling of the American Mind.
It's a really important book, I believe,
and one that doesn't just get into the darker aspects
of human mating behavior and violence,
but also strategies that people can take to ensure healthy mating behavior and relationships.
There's so much rumour speculation and outright fabrication of ideas about why human select
particular mates in the short and long term, what men and women do differently, and so on.
What I love about Dr. Buses' work is that it's grounded in laboratory studies that are
highly quantitative using rigorous statistics.
And so throughout today's discussion, you'll notice that I'm wrapped with attention, trying
to extract as much information as I can from Dr. Bus about the real science of human
mate selection and mating strategy.
I'm certain that everyone will take away extremely valuable knowledge that they can use in existing or future relationships from this discussion with
Dr. Bus. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching
and research roles at Stanford. It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero
costs to consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public.
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And now my conversation with Dr. David Bus.
Well, David, delighted to be here.
I've followed your work for a number of years,
and I'm excited to ask you a number of questions about these super interesting topics about how people select
mates, how they lie, cheat, and but also behave well in this dance that we call mate choice.
Yes, yeah. Fortunately, there are well-behaving humans
in the mix here.
Good to know.
Just to start off, perhaps you could just
orient us a little bit about mate choice.
Some of the primary criteria that study show men and women
use in order to select mates, both,
should we call them transient mates,
as well as lifetime mates.
Right, well that's a critical distinction
because what people look for in a long-term committed mateship,
like a marriage partner or a long-term romantic relationship,
is different from what people look for in a hookup
or casual sex or one they'd stand
or even a brief affair.
So that's actually critical.
Wonder if we can maybe just back up a second and just talk a little bit about the theoretical
framework for understanding mate choice.
So it basically stems from Darwin's theory of sexual selection.
And most people, when they think about evolution, they think about cliche as like survival of the fittest
or written nature, red and tooth and claw.
And Darwin noticed that there were phenomena
that couldn't be explained by this so-called survival selection.
Things like the brilliant plumage of peacocks,
sex differences like in stags, for example,
have these massive antlers and the females of those species
do not.
And so he came up with a theory of sexual selection,
which deals not with the evolution of characteristics
due to their survival advantage,
but rather due to their mating advantage.
And he identified two causal processes
by which mating advantage could occur.
One is intersexual competition
with the stereotyping two stags locking horns in combat
with the victor gaining sexual access to the female loser
ambling off with a broken antler
and dejected and low self-esteem
and needing psychotherapy perhaps,
or may value improvement therapy.
And the logic was whatever qualities led to success in these same-sex battles, those qualities
get passed on in greater numbers.
And so you see evolution, which has changed over time, and increase in frequency of the
characteristics associated with winning these, what Darwin called contest competition.
And we know that the logic of that is more general now, and involves things like, in our species characteristics associated with winning these, what Darwin called contest competition.
And we know that the logic of that is more general now
and involves things like, in our species,
competing for position and status hierarchies.
So anyway, so intracexual competition is one.
But the second most relevant to your question
about mate choice is preferential mate choice.
That was the second causal pathway.
And the logic there is that if members of 1-sex agree with one another, if there's some
consensus about the qualities that are desired, then those of the opposite sex who possess
the desired qualities or embody those desired qualities, they have a mating advantage.
They get chosen, they get preferred.
Those lacking desired qualities
get banished, shunned, ignored, or in the modern environment become in cells. And so the
logic there is very simple but also very powerful. And that is that whatever qualities are
desired, consensually desired, if there's some heritable basis to those, then those increase in frequency over time.
And so, and in the human case, these two causal processes of sexual selection are related
to each other in that the preferences of the mate preferences of one sex basically set
the ground rules for competition in the opposite sex.
So if, for example, hypothetically,
women preferred to mate with men who were able
and willing to devote resources to them,
then that would create competition among men
to claw their way and beat out other men
in resource acquisition and then displaying that,
their willingness to commit that to a particular woman.
And same with women, though.
And it's one of the interesting things about humans is that we have mutual made choice,
which is not true in all species.
And that is that it's not just a matter of, you know, you selecting someone to be your
mate.
They have to reciprocally select you.
And so with mutual made choice, we have both preferences, mate preferences, that women
have, and mate preferences that men have, and consequently, competition among men for
access to the most desirable women in competition among women for access to the most desirable
man.
So that's sort of a little bit of theoretical backdrop.
So you asked, well, what are the qualities that men and women desire? And maybe we'll start with a long-term mating and then shift to short-term mating. And long-term mating is interesting
in and of itself in that it's very rare in the mammalian world.
So there are more than 5,000 species of primates,
of which, I'm sorry, more than 5,000 species of mammals
of which we are one, but the percentage of mammals
that have anything resembling
like a pair of bunge that long term mating strategy,
it's about three to five percent.
It's extremely rare.
And even our closest primate relatives, the chimpanzees,
they don't have a long-term mating strategy.
They don't have anything resembling parabond and mating.
In the chimps, the females come into estrus.
Almost all the sexual activity occurs during an estrus phase
after that males and females basically ignore each other
for the most part, with some exceptions.
But with humans, you have the evolution of long-term
pair bonding, attachment, heavy male investment
in offspring, relatively concealed population.
And so these are kind of unique aspects of the human mating system.
So to get to your question, so what are the qualities?
So the best, the most large scale study that's been done on this is a study that I did a while back of 37 different cultures.
And it's not been replicated by other researchers, but basically what we found is three clusters of things. We found qualities that both men and women wanted in a long term made.
We found some qualities that were sex differentiated, where women preferred them more than men,
or men preferred them more than women.
And then we found some attributes that were highly variable across cultures in whether
people found these as desirable or
indispensable or irrelevant in a mate. And so I could give examples of each of these if that.
Yeah, that would be great. I'd love to know what some of the common themes were across these
cultures in terms of what's being made and sexually selected for.
Yeah. So some of the things that we're,
so you've talked about universal desire,
so things that men and women share.
There are things like intelligence, kindness,
mutual attraction and love,
which is really kind of heartwarming,
because some people think that love
is a recent Western invention by some European poets, but it turns out it's not true.
You go to the clung son in Botswana,
and they describe pretty much the same experience
as a falling in love as we do,
and even describe the distinction
between this kind of infatuation stage of love
and the attachment phase where, you know,
you can't maintain this frenzy of infatuation
and obsession for very long, six weeks,
maybe six months at most.
Otherwise, you can get nothing else done in your life.
And those are those dopamine circuits firing
at high frequency.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So mutual attraction love, good health, dependability,
emotional stability, although there's a bit of a sex difference there with women preferring it,
a bit more than men. And so basically, and these may seem obvious. So no one wants a stupid, mean, ugly disease-ridden mate.
And so perhaps obvious, but no one do this in advance of the 37
culture study.
So these were some universal preferences.
So you go to the Zulu tribe in South Africa
or Rio de Janeiro and Brazil or Portugal or Oslo or anywhere in
the world. And these are qualities that people universally desire in long-term mates.
Sex differences. So sex differences basically fell into two clusters. So women, more than men, prioritized good earning capacity,
slightly older age, and the qualities
associated with resource acquisition.
So these are things like a man's social status.
Does he have drive?
Is he ambitious?
Does he have a good long-term resource trajectory
is one way that I like to phrase it,
because women often they don't look at necessarily
the resources that a guy possesses at this moment,
but what is his trajectory?
Yes, I'm just sorry to interrupt, but may I ask,
is there anything known about the commonalities
of how that is assessed?
You know, is it, you know, he's rolling out a bed early and running eight miles. He's showing
proficiency in school. He handles himself well socially at parties, isn't drinking too much,
but knows when, you know, I mean, obviously they're integrating multiple cues, the brain
is a complex place, but is there any information about what those variables are across cultures?
Yeah, well, I think that there's been less attention to that, so that's a great question.
One of the things that we do know across cultures is that women attend to the attention structure.
So the attention structure is a key determinant of status.
So as people who are high in status are those to whom the most people pay the most attention.
So the attention of others to them, not how well a given potential may can focus and pay
attention necessarily.
Yes, exactly. But women, look, I mean, is the guy,
even in the modern environment,
is the guy spending eight hours a day playing video games,
eating cheetos and drinking beer,
or is he devoting effort to his professional development?
So hard work, ambition, does he have clear goals
or is he in an existential crisis not knowing
what he's gonna do with his life?
So those are some of the qualities that people look for.
And also women use what's called in the literature
mate choice copying.
And this is related in part to the attention structure
that is guys who part to the attention structure. That is, guys who have
passed the filters of multiple women, those are like pre-approved, pre-approved men. So we've
done studies where you just take a guy, photograph him alone, versus take the same guy, put an attractive woman next to him, or put two
women next to him, and women judge exactly the same guy to be much more attractive if there's
if there is paired with women than if he's not. And so, and some guys exploit this in the modern
world by hiring wing women to go with them and dates and so forth. This is my sister, a former girlfriend or whatever.
But you're correct in the women use multiple cues
to assess these things.
And they change over time.
So in the modern environment, even in things
like the attention structure, does
this guy have a million Twitter followers or three Twitter followers? So that is an index
of the attention structure and hence the status of the guy within the broader community.
So and from an evolutionary perspective, it's reasonable that women would prioritize these
qualities because of the tremendous asymmetry in our reproductive biology, namely that fertilization
occurs internally within women, not within men.
Women bear the burdens of the nine-month pregnancy, which is metabolically expensive as well
as creating opportunity costs in terms of mobility and solving other tasks that people need to solve in the course of their lives.
And so one way to phrase that is that the costs of making a badmate choice are much heavier for women when it comes to sexual behavior, certainly, because, and the benefits correspondingly
of making a wise made choice are higher for women
in the sexual context.
But as I said, we have mutual made choice in our species.
And so what do men value more than women?
Physical attractiveness?
They rank that as a more important criteria than do women about men.
Yes. Yeah. Exactly. Consistently across cultures. Consistently, and it's not that women are
indifferent to it. So women do pay attention to a guy's physical appearance, his fitness,
and so forth. And guys are actually off base in thinking that women prefer more muscular
men than they actually do.
So like in muscle magazines, these men are bulging biceps and so forth.
Women don't find that, especially, but they do prioritize fit men, a good shoulder to
hip ratio, and other qualities of physical appearance, as well as things like cues to health.
So physical appearance provides a wealth of information about a person's health status,
but also provides for men a wealth of information about a woman's fertility, her reproductive
value.
Not that men think about that consciously.
I mean, you men don't walk down the street and see a woman
and say, oh, I find her attractive because I think she
must be very fertile.
Maybe a few weird people do that, but most men just,
it's like they just find those cues attractive.
And the cues are cues associated with youth and health
because we know that youth is a very powerful cue
to fertility and reproductive value.
So men prioritize physical appearance.
And in the field of psychology, it used to, what I was taught when I was an undergraduate,
that you can't judge a book by its cover, that physical attractiveness was infinitely arbitrary,
infinitely culturally variable, and it's simply not true. We know now, based on the last 20 years of scientific studies, that the cues that men find
attractive women are not at all arbitrary.
There is some variation across cultures, like in relative pl clear eyes, symmetrical features, a low waist to hip ratio, full lips,
lustrous hair, all these are qualities that are associated with youth and health, and hence have
evolved to be part of our standards of attractiveness. And so it's not just that men are these superficial creatures
who evaluate women on the basis of appearance,
there's an underlying logic to why they do so.
And as I said, relative youth, this age thing
is one of the largest sex differences
that you find in long-term age selection
with women prefering somewhat older men
and men prefering somewhat younger women.
Is there a consistent age gap to relate to that statement?
Yes, there is.
So the age gap, though, depends on the age of the man.
So we can document this.
So in my studies, what we found is that men preferred women
who were about three to four years younger than they were
on average, and I'll qualify this in a second.
Women preferred guys who were about three and a half
to four and a half years older than they were.
So there was a sex difference going in the opposite direction.
But as men get older, they prefer women who are increasingly
younger than they are.
So one way to gauge this, so there are actual marriage statistics, and then there are
express preferences, and both sex is kind of converged.
So if you look at, you know, first marriage, second marriage, third marriage, as if people get divorced
and remarried, average age gap is in America anyway, is three years at first marriage with
the guys being older, five years at second marriage, and eight years at third marriage.
So that as men are getting older and getting divorced and remarried, they are marrying
women who are increasingly younger than they are
In terms of preferences
It's also expressed in preferences. So it doesn't go down
So like a say a 25 year old man wouldn't say prefer a woman who's 20 or in her early 20s
35 year old man might prefer a woman who's in our late 20s or early 30s.
50-year-old man might prefer a woman who's say 35 to 38. So the preferences do go up, but the gap
gets increasingly larger. And the reason that you don't see things like, why aren't men preferring women?
So peak fertility in humans is around age 24, 25.
And so you say, well, why aren't the 60 year old men prioritizing 25 year old women?
Well, as I mentioned, we have a reciprocal mutual mate choice phenomenon.
So she constrains the equation.
Well, she constrains it, but also marriage and long term
mating are things other than reproductive unions
in the modern environment.
That is there.
You're supposed to do things as a couple.
And if you get too large an age gap,
then essentially you're in different cultures.
You grow up with different songs If you get too large an age gap, then essentially you're in different cultures.
You grow up with different songs, and if the cultural gap gets too large, you don't understand
each other.
So there are constraints on that.
But if you look at context where there are no constraints of that sort. So historically, kings, emperors, despots, etc. and I'll give one more modern example.
They basically prefer young fertile, attractive females. And if they have heroms, they stock the
heroms with those and then circulate them out when they're 30 and so forth. And so if you look at marriage systems that are unconstrained,
then the preferences are more likely to be revealed.
Or within cultures, that is, if you look at men who are in a position to get what they want.
So as Mick Jagger noted, you can't always get what you want, but if you try sometimes,
you know, what you need, I hear that most of the time he got what he needed.
Right. Right. He got what he wanted. Right. Yeah. And maybe what he needed. But he was in a position.
I don't know if he's still easy to be. He's in his 70s now. But he was in a position, as was,
let's say, Rod Stewart to take another example, or Lee and Arda de Caprio. If you were a male who's
in a position where there are thousands of women potentially available to you, if you were a male who's in a position
where there are thousands of women
potentially available to you and you can have your pick,
then you see that clear expression for younger females.
There was a chart that was floating around the internet
of the girlfriends of Leonardo DiCaprio as he got older,
so he's getting older and older,
and the graph of the Asia, his girlfriend,
it basically stayed the same,
was in the early 20s or so.
He values consistency.
He values consistency.
But so anyway, the data can merge on that.
So these are universal sex differences
in long- term mate selection.
So now when we shift to, oh, and I should mention
cultural variability, because that's a critical thing.
Because there is, in my 37 culture study,
what I found was the preference for virginity,
that is, no prior sexual experience,
that was the most variable desire across cultures.
So you had cultures like, at the time of the study,
China, it was basically indispensable
that a partner be a virgin.
And then at the other end, you have Sweden
where, Sweden's typically placed close to zero value on it
and some even find it undesirable.
Like, you're weird if you're a virgin.
And so you have this whole spectrum.
This is a virginity in the female,
or is this also, this is not,
in China, was it preference at the male and the female?
Okay, so mutual mates selection.
Yeah, it was a preference for both sexes.
Interesting.
But it's a good question because where there was a sex difference, it was always in the direction
of males preferring virginity more than females.
And we've gone back to China.
So I still do research in China among other places.
And we've gone back and retested modern urban populations.
And the importance of virginity has gone down in China, especially in the urban
areas, and the sex difference that did things this before has
now emerged, where males value it more than females.
And I think part of it was in previous times you hit ceiling
effects, where both sexes say, yeah, it's absolutely
important to be a virgin.
So there's cultural variation and cultural change over time in some of these qualities.
But the sex differences that I described have remained invariant over the years. So since my 37
culture study, this has been replicated in at least a couple of the dozen different cultures.
And we've gone back to some of the culture.
So I mean, so we've gone back to China,
Brazil and India to look at cultural changes over time.
And there have been, you know,
in some cases dramatic cultural changes over time,
but the sex differences that I described are invariant. They haven't changed a bit.
I'd be remiss if I didn't ask about truth telling and deception, because some of the
measures that you're describing age, for instance, one can potentially lie about, right?
I'm guessing that there are people who do that on online profiles and whatnot. From what I understand, people also lie about height and other features on online profiles.
But some of them are much harder to hide, right? Eventually, the truth comes out about some,
if not all of these things. So if you would, could you tell us about how men and women leverage deception versus truth-telling
and communicating some of the things around mate choice selection?
Yeah, well, so basically both men and women do deceive.
So we have the modern cultural invention of online dating, which was little used 10 years ago and virtually
absent 20 years ago. And people do lie, but they lie in predictable ways. They lie in ways
that attempt to embody the make preferences of the person they're trying to attract. And
so men do lie, they deceive about their income, their status, so they exaggerate
their income by about 20%. They add, they tack on about two inches to their height. So if
they're 5'10", they round up to six feet. So they don't like if they're 5'10", they
don't say that they're gigantic, but they kind of rounded up in the more desirable direction.
Women tended to see about weight, so they tend to shave about 15 pounds off of their reported weight,
and both sexes post photos that are not truly representative of what they actually look like.
So they might post photos of themselves when they were younger or they're even advice
tips on how to create the best selfie of the best angle that will maximally enhance what you
look like. Or just doctoring a photos I'm guessing. Oh yeah, phot yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely. And and one of the things
about it now you say like, well, do people find out? Of course, people do find out. I mean, I just give you one story about a colleague of mine who was doing is a male who's doing internet
dating. And he picked only women who self-described as sevens on the one to seven on attractiveness.
So the most attractive, so as self-reported,
and so until in it, there's one woman
and she was missing her front teeth.
And he said, well, call me picky,
but missing her front teeth,
and she thinks she's like the top of a tractor,
he was a little disappointed about that.
And women, of course, are disappointed.
They made a guy who they
think is this physically fit, you know, athletic guy, and he comes up, he's, you know, 300 pounds and
overweight. So people, people do find out. And so, and there are some internet dating sites have
kind of a vetting of the accuracy of something.
So, somethings you can look up through public records
and this guy have a criminal record, for example,
is he on a sexual offender's website.
So, there's somethings you can verify,
but what I tell people is,
you really have to meet the person and interact.
You know, because the, in part because of the deception, but also because what happens with internet dating is that the
the photograph tends to overwhelm all the other cues and all the other cues are written statements.
And we weren't really evolved to process written statements, but we were
evolved to respond to physical cues.
But, and men tend to attend to the visual cues much more than women.
So women in their mates selection, they have olfactory cues.
So, what does the guy sound like?
His vocal qualities. That's auditory cues. So what does the guy sound like? Is vocal qualities?
That's auditory cues, but all factory cues, what does he smell like? And so women have a more acute sense of smell than men do. And so if the guy doesn't smell right, even if he embodies all the
other qualities, women want that's a deal breaker. And so I encourage people to just stop with
the 100 techs back and forth or messaging and meet a person for a cup of coffee and interact.
And then you'll get a more accurate beat on the person. And then of course, some qualities,
you can't assess even with a half hour interaction. You can tell a lot, but things like emotional stability
are things that have to be assessed over time. And so one of the things that I advise people to do,
and I'm not in the advice-giving business, but people ask me all the time what they find out
what I study. They say, well, I got this problem. Can you give me advice? But one of the things to assess things
like emotional stability, which is absolutely critical
and long-term mating, is to do something like go on a trip
together, take a vacation, where you're even in an unfamiliar
environment where you have to cope with things
that you're not familiar with, and as opposed to an environment where it's very predictable.
And so you get a greater exposure because one of the hallmarks
of emotional instability is how they respond to stress.
So emotionally unstable people tend to have a long latency
to return to baseline after a stressful event.
And so, this is sort of information you can't get on a coffee date.
You can only get by assessing it over time.
Somebody whose laboratory studies stress and tools to combat stress.
That's great. It's yet more incentive for people to develop self-regulatory mechanisms for themselves. I'm guessing many of the features of deception in this context were present
long before internet dating. And so is it somewhat dark to think about, but is deception built
into this dance that we call mate selection and has it been built in for a long time?
Or is this something that you think has emerged more as people are approaching each other
through these electronic based mediums? Yeah. I mean, some forms of deception have been there
for a long time over human evolutionary history. So one form of deception, which we haven't mentioned is deception about whether you're interested
in a long term committed relationship
or a short-term hookup.
And so there's deception about that,
especially on the part of men.
So men who are interested in a lot on Tinder,
it has been reported, although Tinder denies this,
there's been reported that something like 30% of the men
on Tinder are either married or in long-term committed
relationships and they're looking for something on the side.
But in terms of successfully attracting a mate,
the overt display that, hey, I'm interested in just a short-term
hook I'm interested in sex, so I want to have sex right now.
Let's just go back to my apartment.
These are very ineffective tactics.
And so effective tactics for men are often
displaying cues to long-term interest.
And so, and of course, that's effective for a woman
who's seeking a long-term interest.
And so that's a deceptive.
And so we find in our studies of deception
that men tend to exaggerate the depths of their feelings
for a woman, exaggerate how similar they are
and how aligned they are in their values
and religious orientations and political values
and so forth.
And so I think there's deception around that.
And I think that's probably an evolutionarily
recurrent form of deception that women have defenses
against, by the way.
But I think that modern internet dating
opens the door for certain types of deception
that we're at a minimum were difficult to accomplish
ancestrally. So like things like photoshopping. that were at a minimum were difficult to accomplish, and so forth.
So like, things like photoshopping,
you know, wasn't available back then.
Plus, we evolved in the context of small group living
where you not only had your own personal observations
of someone's qualities, you had also your relatives,
your friends, allies, the social reputation
that someone had.
And these are all critical sources of information that are less available in modern environments
because people migrate, they move from place to place, they can close down one internet profile and put up another or they could have six
going simultaneously.
So, the modern environment opens up the door for forms of deception that weren't available
or weren't available to the same degree, ancestrally.
I see.
Very interesting. Would you mind touching on some of the features that are selected for in terms of sexual partner choice?
We talked a little bit about mate choice, but in terms of sexual partner choice. Are there any good studies exploring what people are selecting for? Or is it
that they are both just in a state of pure hypothalamic drive, you know, monoscientist after
all? And therefore, it's hard to recreate in the laboratory.
Well, no, no, we do know something about that. And we know something about how the preference
is for a sex partner differ from preference for long-term
mate. There is overlap, of course, but one thing is physical appearance. So physical appearance for
women is important in long-term mating, not as important it is for men, but it becomes more
important in short-term mating. And so is the guy good looking. So those physical
attributes are more important for women. They are, they remain important for men, physical
appearance in short term mating, but with the footnote that men are willing to drop their standards in short term mating. If it's low commitment, low risk, just sex,
without entangling commitments,
women are more likely to prioritize
what I call bad boy qualities.
So guys who are very self-confident, guys who are
strut, guys who are a little arrogant, guys who are risk-taking, guys who defy conventions,
women are more attracted to those guys in short term mating than long term mating.
And whereas in long term mating, they go more for the good dad qualities, is this guy
dependable? Is he going to be a good father to my children? And then also in short term mating
women use that mate copying heuristic, that is if there are thousands of other women who find
a attractive, women find a attractive.
And so that's why you have the groupie phenomenon.
So with rock stars, for example, there are thousands of screaming women, all of whom want
to sleep with this famous rock star, and they use that as information.
They find, if you took like a still photo of some of these rock stars and asked women
how attractive the guy is versus tell
him he's a famous rock star and show the thousands of women screaming at him that they judge
him entirely differently in terms of his attractiveness.
So, or even, and this is an important point that women's attraction to men is more context specific and varies
more across contexts than men's attraction to women.
And so I'll give you just an example
that this is a female colleague of mine
went to a conference, an academic conference,
and she found the organizer of this conference
to be really attractive and then saw him six months later
and wondered what was I thinking? He doesn't seem very attractive at all. And what it was is when
he was the organizer, he was at the center of the attention structure. You know, he he was the
guy up on stage directing everybody and everyone was attending to him. And then when he was just a
normal presenter at a conference, he wasn't, didn't command the attention structure
like he did in that when he was the organizer.
And so this is just an illustration
of how circumstance dependent women's
made attraction is for guys.
It depends on, you know, his status,
the number of women that are attracted to him, the attention structure
is how he interacts with a puppy or a baby.
If he's ignoring a baby in distress or positively interacting with a young child, all these
things, where is for men, it almost doesn't matter.
You know, context is a more irrelevant.
They're honing in on the specific
psychophysical cues that the woman is displaying in context be damned. Very interesting. Let's talk
about infidelity in committed relationships. What are some of the consistent findings around
What are some of the consistent findings around reasons for, and maybe even long-term consequences of infidelity for men and women?
This could be marriage or long-term partnership or infidelity of any kind, I suppose.
Yeah, so well...
I'm guessing it does happen.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, that's...
How frequent is it?
Yeah, that's the interesting thing.
Well, well, how frequent it is is difficult to gauge because it's the,
the one of the forms of human conduct that people like to keep secret.
So, so if you go back, now let's say 70 years to the classic kinsy studies,
the questions benefitality were the questions that most
people were fused to answer, and when the question was brought up, cause more people to drop
out of the study.
And so that kind of tells you something that, I mean, what do people conceal, you know,
infidelity, incest, murder, you know, there's a small handful of things that people universally
want to conceal in infidelity is one of them.
But people do it.
And so, Kinsey estimated 26% of married women committed in infidelity at some point are in their marriage in about 50% of men.
Other studies have given lower figures.
And so the exact figures bounce around, depending on anonymity provided,
and how comfortable they are with the interviewer,
and so forth, but.
And by infidelity, is that mean intercourse with somebody else?
Yeah. So we're not talking about,
quote, unquote, emotional affairs.
We're talking about,
this were just sex with somebody other
than their committed partner with unbeknownst to their partner.
Right. Right. And there are other forms of infidelity,
which we could get into, including emotional infidelity
and financial infidelity.
But here, we're just talking about, for the moment,
sexual infidelity.
And the interesting thing about sexual infidelity
is that the sexes really differ fundamentally
in the motives for committing infidelity.
So for men, the primary motive,
and these are on average sex differences.
So whenever I talk about second term,
I'm talking about on average sex differences
because there's overlap in the distributions
and but so these are generalizations
of which there are exceptions.
So for men, it's mainly a matter of sexual variety.
So about 70% of the men, the opportunity presented itself.
I was out of town and I had this opportunity.
So low risk, low cost, pursuit of sexual variety,
sexual novelty, as a key motivation for men. Sorry to interrupt, I just want to... So 70% of men that cheat, that's the primary cause,
or is it that 70% of men do cheat? No, no. 70... Of the men who cheat, 70%, thank you for that
clarification. Of the men who do cheat, 70% cite that as the key motive.
The key reason why they committed an infidel.
Sort of like why mountain climbers climb mountains
because they're there, right?
Because they're there if they,
well, the comedian, I think it was Chris Rock said,
men are only as faithful as their opportunity.
Or how available their password on their phone
is to their partner.
Right, right.
Yeah, so, and that's an exaggeration, how available their password on their phone is to their partner. Right, right. Yeah.
And that's an exaggeration.
But if you look at women, this just desire for pure novelty, sexual variety, as much less
of a motive.
But women who have affairs cite that they're unhappy with their primary relationship,
emotionally unhappy, or sexually unhappy, and typically both.
And this may seem like totally obvious that, well, of course, people are unhappy
and the relationship are more likely to stray, but in fact, it's not true for men.
So if you compare men who are happy with their marriage and men who are not happy
with their marriage, there's no difference in their infidelity rates. And I think it goes
down to that issue of, you know, it's a motive for seeking variety. So now, why do women
do it? Because it's a risky endeavor, she risks her long-term mate or losing long-term mate.
It's risky in terms of reputational damage for both sexes.
So it's a risky thing.
Why do women do it?
And there are two competing hypotheses, at least two,
but there are two primary competing hypotheses
in the evolutionary literature.
One is called the dual mating strategy hypothesis,
where women are seeking to get resources and investment from one guy and good genes from
another guy. So in principle, that can work. And I initially, this isn't, hypothesis original
with me. This is Steve Ganga, Stead, Randy Thornhill and some others of Marty Hazelton
a former student of mine have advocated this dual mating
strategy hypothesis.
And originally I was in endorsed it
because the data seemed to support it.
And we can get into which data seemed to support it.
But over time, I became more and more dubious about this
hypothesis and instead have advocated what I call
the mate switching hypothesis.
And so if you look at a whole host of information around why women have affairs, it's not compatible
with the dual mating strategy hypothesis.
So, and is compatible with the mate switching, that is, women who are looking to either divest themselves from an existing mate ship or trade up in the mating market
to a mate who is more compatible with them or higher in mate value, or simply see whether
they're sufficiently desirable so that it eases the transition into the mating pool
or keeping it made as a potential backup mate,
what I call mate insurance.
If you have car insurance if something bad happens
to your car, house insurance,
we also have mate insurance, keeping someone,
one woman said men are like soup,
you always wanna have one on the back burner.
So, interesting.
Whether that's the best analogy,
I'm not sure, but it kind of captures something about why.
So, well, what evidence am I talking about?
Well, for one thing, women who have a fears,
and this is about 70% of them, they, again, sorry, just, I want to make sure people,, women who have a fears, and this is about 70% of them,
they, again, sorry, just I want to make sure people, of women who have a fear.
Yeah, of the women who have a fear.
So let's say ballpark Kinsey was,
let's say roughly right, 25, 26% of women who have a fear.
Let's just assume that he's right.
And we don't know exactly,
but of the women who do have a fears,
about 70% say they have fallen in love with
their affair partner, they become deeply emotionally involved with their affair partner.
And to me, if you're just trying to get good Jeeds from a guy, that is the last thing
you want to do is fall in love with them or get emotionally involved, but it's very
compatible if you want to switch mates.
And so that's one piece of evidence that suggests that the mate switching function of infidelity
is a more likely explanation.
Now these two are not inherently incompatible hypotheses.
In other words, it's possible that some women do pursue a dual mating strategy hypothesis, but there's
other evidence that suggests so, for example, what are the actual rates of genetic
cuckoldry? Well, in the modern environment anyway, they're pretty low. It turns out they're
like two to three percent. Could you just explain for the audience what genetic culture is?
So this is where the woman, where the man believes he is the genetic father of a child,
but it turns out he's not, might be the male man or the next-door neighbor or the guy
she's having in a fair with. So mistaken paternity, and genetic cockledry is just one way to capture.
Named after the Cuckoo bird, right?
Named after the Cuckoo bird.
Yes.
Who sneaks its eggs into the nest of the other rolls, destroys the future offspring of the bird,
and then basically offloads all the work onto another father.
Parasetizes, yeah, the parental investment of different bird species.
So anyway, so I think that in there's other sources of evidence that I think points.
So one of the sources of evidence that initially seemed to support the dual mating strategy
hypothesis was ovulation shifts.
So in other words, it looked like from the early studies
that when women are ovulating, these are among non-piltaking
women, non-women, not on a hormonal contraceptus,
that they experienced a preference shift
toward more men who were masculine and symmetrical,
which were hypothesized markers for good genes.
And there's an explanation for that.
But it turns out the effects of ovulation on women's
mate preferences are far weaker than the initial studies looked like.
And in fact, some larger scale studies have failed to replicate them entirely.
And so that was one of the key sources of evidence, these
ovulationships that women were going after good genes because it's only when she's
ovulating and she can get pregnant by having sex with another man, that it would make sense
for her to have sex with another man. And there was even some early evidence that women
were timing their affairs, timing sex with their
affair partners to coincide with when they were ovulating. But as I said, some of these subsequent
studies have failed to replicate these early findings, calling into question the dual mating strategy
notion. And so I think I've shifted my views on this and now endorse the May-Twitching hypothesis
as a more likely explanation
for why most women have affairs.
Well, the way you describe this makes me wonder
if of the women that have affairs,
do those affairs tend to be more long-lasting
than the affairs that men have.
Because the way you describe it is
men are seizing an opportunity to sort of a carpe diem type approach to a infidelity.
And women potentially, on average, are capitalizing on something that is longer term. Now, of course,
if they're doing this around ovulation, then it would constrain the amount of times they
would need to see or have sex with the other person
that they're not married to.
But is there any evidence that women have more ongoing affairs and men have more transient
affairs?
Yes, there is.
And so if you look at people who have affairs, there's a sex difference there, so that women
tend to have affairs with one person and become emotionally involved with that one person
over time, men tend to, who have affairs,
tend to have affairs with a larger number
of affair partners.
And so, which then by definition can't be long-lasting.
You can't have long-term affairs
with six different partners.
Yeah, unless he's juggling multiple phone accounts
or something.
Right, right. And some men try to do that,
but I think it could be very taxing.
Yeah, well, and in this day and age,
it's easier to meet more people by virtue
of online communications,
but it's also easier to get caught,
meaning it's harder to conceal interactions,
everything's in the cloud anyway.
A good friend of mine,
who is a former very high level
and special operations said,
anything that's not in your head
and only in your head is available for others
to find should they want it.
Yeah, I think that's largely true.
Yeah, and yeah, so fun information, text messages,
and people are very good at hacking into their partners,
funds, computers, and then also there are video cameras everywhere.
So sneaking off to this acquired restaurant, I mean, there are probably eight video cameras
that can record you walking in and out of that restaurant.
Everything can be found.
I'm certain of that.
You mentioned emotional affairs and financial
infidelity as well. I had a girlfriend once who as an early date discussion said, not that I get
the impression that you are, but I want to be very clear, she said, that you are not emotionally,
physically, or financially tied to any other women.
And I thought it was very interesting
that now you bring up a financial infidelity.
She's quite happily partnered now,
and not with me, but it's interesting.
It's the first time I heard anyone spell it out that way
as a list, almost like specific aims and a grant.
What is emotional infidelity?
What is financial infidelity?
Yeah, well, this is a very smart woman.
To the top of all three.
And I assumed you gave honest responses to all of those three questions.
As I recall, I did, because we now know that you can ask her at some point.
And there is self deception in the service of deception that is another issue. So emotional
infidelity is basically exactly what it sounds like. It's falling in love with someone else,
becoming psychologically close to someone else, sharing intimate or private information with someone
else. That's what I mean by emotional infidelity. And one of the hallmarks of this study done by a former student
of my Barry Culey is very clever, I thought.
He analyzed, there used to be this reality TV show called Cheaters
where they would hire detectives.
And when the detective would like say,
follow someone to a hotel room, they'd call up the partner
and say, your husband just walked into the hotel room with someone
else. Would you like to come down to the hotel and confront him and certain
percentage of people would confront and what he analyzed so he analyzed all
these episodes of this show called Cheaters and what he examined was the
verbal interrogations when people confronted
their partners. And when men confronted their partners, the first question they want to know
is, did you fuck him? Women, the first question was, do you love her? And so this kind of captures
that difference between a sexual infidelity and emotional infidelity, and also kind of captures
that difference between a sexual infidelity and emotional infidelity, and also kind of captures another sex difference when it comes to sexual jealousy,
where men tend to be more focused on the sexual components of the infidelity,
because those are what compromise his paternity, his certainty,
but he's actually the genetic father of whatever offspring ensue.
Whereas love is a cue to, do you love her?
That's a cue that he's going to leave you, the woman, for another woman, is a cue to
the long-term loss of that investment and commitment from that partner. And so the sexes seem to differ in which aspects of the infidelity
with women were attuned to more upset
by the emotional infidelity, men more
by the sexual infidelity.
Now, financial infidelity has been explored much less,
but in my new book, When Men Behave Badly,
I have a section on financial
infidelity where I summarize all the research that has been done. And I was kind of flabbergasted
by the percentage of people who do things like have credit cards that their spouse doesn't know
about, keep secret bank accounts, have the credit card bills mailed to their office rather than their home, have basically resources and expenditures of pooled resources that they keep from their partner.
And both sexes do it.
And the percentages vary from study to study, but they range from like 30 to 60% of all people
who are keeping financial information from their spouse and one
where another could be the woman's out buying designer purses or designer handbags,
it could be the guy's out going to strip clubs or taking his affair partner to restaurants
and doesn't want those charges to show up on, you know, jointly held credit card.
So financial infidelity is critical.
And then even things like diverting
pooled resources to one set of
genetic relatives versus another set is another thing that people
tend to keep secret. So there are forms of financial infidelity as well.
So, yeah, infidelity, you're absolutely,
it's a great question because it shouldn't be confined
to sexual infidelity, which is what most people think about,
but also emotional and financial.
Interestingly, if you ask people,
what do you mean, what is infidelity in a marriage?
Men tend to say, well, it's obvious as she
has sex with someone else. That's infidelity. Whereas women are likely to have a broader definition
of infidelity, they will cite things like emotional infidelity, financial infidelity, as part of the
definition, whereas men have that more narrow definition. Interesting. I have a good friend who's a couples
counselor, a clinical psychologist, and she told me something interesting that
relates to this, which is that in cases of infidelity, oftentimes the
some of the arguments between couples boil down to whether or not contraception
was used or not. That becomes a key feature. And she always thought that that was, you know, homing in on a detail, which, of course,
is an important detail as it relates to both paternity issues and pregnancy, but also disease,
right? But as we're talking about all this, it makes it, it makes me think that this may have
deeper evolutionary roots in our further down in the brain,
as we say, in neuroscience literature. Yeah, well, and, yeah, and I mean, using a condom versus
not using a condom, not using is a more intimate act in a way you were literally physically more
intimate with someone else than if you do use a condom. So, you know, but whether it's,
whether evolutionary roots to this,
I don't know, I mean, condoms are probably relatively recent
and at least the widespread use of them,
a relatively recent evolutionary time.
So I doubt we have adaptation specifically for them.
No, and presumably before condoms,
one can only speculate because as we say, when it comes to
behavior, there's rarely a fossil record. But sometimes there is, it would be the withdrawal method
of contraception, which a good friend of mine, whose laboratory works on reproductive biology,
says the reason that's a poor choice of contraception is because it was designed not to work.
says the reason that's a poor choice of contraception is because it was designed not to work. Yes.
So note to those of trying to avoid unwanted pregnancy.
So we talked a little bit about status in terms of what men and women are selecting for
different types of relationships.
Is there anything else about status that you find particularly interesting and what men are finding attractive besides these
waste of hip ratios and quality of potential mothers and so forth. Are there any kind of hidden
gems in the literature around this that I might not have heard of? Well, yeah, so you mean among things like sex differences in what leads to high status
or for instance, or perhaps things that are surprising in terms of what people are selecting
for.
Do people even know what they're selecting for?
Or is this all subconscious?
Any and all of those topics are of interest to me.
Yeah, so we'll take them in reverse order.
I think a lot of it is conscious,
but some of it is certainly unconscious,
where there are elements which are totally unconscious.
So I mentioned one earlier where
man looks at a woman, he's aware that he's attracted to her
and attracted to her physical appearance,
but he might not be aware of why. We didn her and attracted to her physical appearance, but he might
not be aware of why.
We didn't evolve to be aware of why, just like with food preferences.
We find certain things delectable and other things nauseating.
We don't understand the adaptive logic of why our food preferences exist and why we have
them.
And the same is true of mating.
And so men find women with a low waist tip ratio attractive,
but they might not, they almost rarely will they know,
oh, low waist waist ratio is actually
associated with higher fertility, lower endocrine
logical problems, lower age, etc.
So we're sometimes aware of what we want, but we are unaware of why we want it.
So I think there are unconscious elements that the whole topic of status and what leads to high status on low status, it's topic I'm currently investigating,
published a couple scientific articles on it.
And so, but maybe we'll hold off on that
for a future discussion.
But it intersects, I'll mention one,
it intersects with mating in interesting ways
in that higher status gives people the ability to choose from a wider pool of potential
mates than they would if they have low status.
And so one of the reasons that people strive for status is because they have access to
more desirable mates, conversely having desirable mates
endows you with higher status.
And so if you have, if you're a male,
you have a very attractive woman on your arm
that leads to high status.
And so there's a reciprocal link between status
and mating in that way.
There have been studies where you say they pose
a kind of unattractive guy,
older, unattractive guy,
and a stummingly beautiful woman as a girlfriend,
and they say, well, what's this guy all about?
And they say, well, he must be very high in status,
he must be very wealthy, he must have a lot going for him.
Whereas the reverse people don't make the same attributions.
And so there is an interesting reciprocal link between status
and mating success, where mating success leads to high status
and high status leads to more mating success.
To over and over again, there are these instances
that you describe where the assessment
of potential mate sexual
or long-term partnership
or being made in the contents of good statistical practices,
looking at the choices of others as a readout
of your own choices.
That seems to be a theme that this is not being made
in a very narrow context,
but paying attention to what other people are paying attention to
seems to come up again and again.
Slightly off-center from that, but still paying attention to what other people are paying attention to seems to come up again and again. Slightly off-center from that, but still paying attention to what other people are paying
attention to.
What's known about jealousy in men versus women and how frequent it is, how intense it
is, and what people do with that jealousy.
I mean, we hear, or I've heard at some point, that a large fraction of
homicides are the consequence of jealous lovers. That's the darkest angle of all this, but
in evolutionary psychology context, what is jealousy? Does it relate to paternity issues only?
What can you tell us about jealousy? Yeah, so, well, that's a great set of questions.
And when I first started studying jealousy,
I reviewed all the prior publications on jealousy.
And at that time, jealousy was regarded
as a sign of immaturity, a sign of insecurity,
a sign of neurosis or pathology, or in some cases delusion.
And what I argued is, and do argue, is that jealousy is an evolved emotion that serves
several adaptive functions.
Okay, one of which you mentioned is a paternity certainty function, but to back up
a second, basically once you have the evolution of long-term mating, long-term pair bonds,
you're talking about from a male perspective, investing a tremendous amount of resources
in a woman and her children over years or decades, even with boomerang kids now, and they can go more than two decades.
Boomerang kids.
Yeah, kids to leave home and then come back and live at home
because they're happy.
Because they, oh yeah, that happened.
I don't have children, so I go, okay, yeah.
No, that's a big thing.
But if I do all just expect that they'll come back
and come back, as they, they can't find a job
or they find it cheaper to live at the parents house
or whatever.
Oh goodness, I can't think of anything worse.
I mean, I love my parents, but I know, I know,
I can't imagine, but it happens.
And it's happening more and more
in the given the current economic situation.
Okay, but so once you have long term mating,
you need a defense to prevent or preserve the investment
that you've made in our making in long-term mateship.
And so jealousy serves this mate-guiding function, if you will, or mate retention function.
So in other words, one way of phrasing this is that we know that there are affairs.
We know that people break up, they get
divorced, but people have adaptations to want to hold on to their mates.
Okay, and that's what jealousy is important about.
And so jealousy gets activated when there are threats to that romantic relationship.
In their other forms of jealousy, like sibling jealousy and so forth, but we're focusing
on mating jealousy in this context.
So now what's interesting is that the threats to an ongoing valued romantic relationship
come from many sources.
So they could be you detect cues to your partner's infidelity or cues of an emotional distance between you and your partner. You say, I love
you to your partner and your partner says, I wonder how the nicks are doing this scoring
season or whatever. If you get an unresurpercated, I love you as a bad cue.
Or some people are so tuned to this, if there's a half millisecond delay, they can detect delays in response.
Yes, yeah.
Yeah, delays in responses.
But even things like, so that's one set of cues.
But then there's another set of interested mate poachers.
So if you're mated to someone who's desirable,
which many people are, other people still desire them.
And so sometimes try to poach them or lure them away from you
for a short-term sexual encounter or for a longer-term relationship.
And so jealousy motivates people to be attentive to potential
mate potters in their environment.
But even more subtle things like mate value discrepancies can trigger jealousy.
So even if there are no mate potures and no
accused infidelity, if a mate value discrepancy
opens up in a relationship.
So in the American system, like you're a six or an eight or a ten,
and people generally pair off based on similarity and mate value.
So that tends to happen.
Tens of them.
Tens of them end up with six is seven,
ends up with six is plus or minus one.
Yeah, yeah.
So, yeah.
These are somewhat subjective.
Okay, it's somewhat subjective,
but there's still some consensus about these things.
So, even in colloquially, people say things like,
he's not good enough for you.
You know, I think you could do better to people
and implicitly have a notion of relative mate value
and discrepancies therein.
Okay, but discrepancies can open up
where none previously existed.
So you get fired from a job all of a sudden,
and most people are very understanding and forgiving
about that if it's not too long.
But you go six months, eight months, people start having problems. Or someone's career takes off.
We'll say a woman becomes a famous singer or actress or a man does. Career takes off. All of a sudden,
there's a mate value discrepancy where you have access to a larger pool of potential mates
and higher mate value potential mates.
So people are attentive to mate value discrepancy,
and so jealous, seeking it activated,
even if there are no immediate threats to a relationship,
but that the mate value discrepancy
is a threat that looms on the horizon of the relationship
because we know statistically
the higher mate value person is more likely to have an affair and is more likely to dump
the other person and trade up in the mating market.
And when people find a new partners for long term relationships do they tend to trade up?
On average, yes, if the discrepancy, if the discrepancy is sufficiently large, so
there are costs associated with breaking up, you know, divorcing, for example, I mean,
is it emotionally, financially, it's a costly thing. And so if you have like a half a
point made value discrepancy, you're not going to see a lot of breakups, but, you know,
if you have larger may value discrepancies, that's going to auger more for trading up in the VATING market.
But then you get into, so what jealousy is, it's an emotion that gets activated by these
circumstances. And then what people do about it depends on what their options are and people do things
that I, in my published scientific work, I say range from vigilance to violence.
So there's whole spectrum of things.
And in fact, I've identified 19 different tactics that people use to deal with problems
once they get jealous.
And one is increased vigilance.
And the other is vigilance for the behavior of the mate. Yeah, vigilance for the behavior of the mate and that can
include stalking, following, hacking into iPhones or computers, monitoring the behavior of
mate poachers, looking at eye contact between other men and your partner.
There's a whole suite of things that you know is involved in in vigilance.
And then at the other extreme and we can talk about things in between but the other extreme is violence and so in my new book
when man behaved badly I have a whole chapter on intimate partner violence and this is
when a man behave badly, I have a whole chapter on intimate partner violence. And this is what I argue, and this is really unfortunate, and I'm not endorsing it.
It's illegal, it's bad, don't do it.
But people will engage in intimate partner violence in America.
Something like 28 to 30% of all people who are married will experience intimate partner violence
in their
in their relationship. So it's not a trivial percentage.
And that violence is between the two partners.
Between the two partners. Yes.
There's also violence that gets directed to our potential mate
poachers, but that's that's a somewhat separate issue. Okay. But
one of the things that is functional about the violence is that it tends to reduce perceived
and mate value discrepancies.
So another is I'll say it's a guy's tend to engage in the violence more than women do,
although some argue that there's more equality in the violence, but at a minimum, men tend
to do more damage when they do the violence.
And when you're talking about violence,
is this ever-emotional violence?
I mean, yeah.
There's that as well.
And in fact, the two tend to be correlated.
So in my studies, the married couples verbal violence
is a good predictor of physical violence happening as well.
So one thing that will happen just to give a concrete example,
guys will start insulting their partners appearance.
You're really looking ugly today.
Your thighs are heavy, you're not looking very good.
So they try to denigrate the woman's appearance,
which is a key component of woman's mate value.
So they're trying to adjust more closely
the mate value discrepancies?
Yeah, they're trying to reduce her perceived,
self-perceived mate value.
So if let's say he's a six, she's an eight, and he can convince her that she's actually
only a six, then she's going to be more likely to stay with him.
Very diabolical.
It's terribly diabolical.
But the fact is, women don't feel good about themselves
when they get beaten up by their partner.
In fact, in the cases where it leaves physical evidence,
women wear sunglasses or turtle necks or cover up,
the bruises is it literally does lower
the main value of the woman by injuring her physical appearance.
And getting her to conceal
herself, stay home.
Exactly.
Exactly.
She's taking her out of the literally reducing her visibility.
Right.
And that's actually one of the predictors of violence is if he starts doing things other
than violence, like cutting off her relationships with her friends and her family, trying to sequester her and prevent her from
getting exposed to potential other partners.
And so it is very diabolical, but I think important to understand, you know, the potential
functionality of intimate partner violence.
So what about a sorry to interrupt again, but I'm just so curious.
So oftentimes my audience will say, yeah, interrupt too often, but I want to make sure that I don't
miss an opportunity to ask you about the intimate partner violence in the other direction,
female to male, where stereotypically speaking, the opportunity for physical violence is still
there, but the idea in mind is that it would be more of a psychological nature.
Although I think there is evidence that some women beat their husbands.
But I'm guessing it's not as frequent or am I...
Well, different studies. So it depends on whether you just simply count up acts
or whether you look at the damage that's done. Okay. And as I mentioned,
men tend to do more physical damage. So there are shelters for battered women all over the country,
as far as I know there's one for battered men.
Now, it may be, and this is partly true,
that men are more ashamed if they get beaten up by their partner
or clocked with a frying pan.
And it's possible, and there's evidence that police don't take it as seriously.
So there's one case that I report in my book
where a guy called the police
and his wife had clocked him with something
and police shows up and he says,
if she so much has broke a fingernail in this altercation,
they'll charge you and not her.
And so there is a police bias,
a potential police bias in this.
And so there may be under reporting of women
beating up men as a consequence.
Okay, but the motivations are often different.
So one is that male sexual jealousy
will trigger him to attack his partner, and then she will
use physical violence to defend herself.
So she might pick up a frying pan or a weapon of some sort to defend herself.
And so, the motivation is his sexual jealousy on his part, but self-defense on her part.
And so that accounts for some unknown percentage of the cases.
And in some cases, it is women who were outraged when they discover their partner has been having
sex with someone else, and then fidelity of a sexual, financial, or emotional nature.
And so there is some female to male violence that absolutely occurs.
But the reduction of a perceived mate value discrepancy
is a key function from male perspective.
Not, again, not that he thinks about this.
He's just angry and wants to hurt her, okay.
But here's one other thing that is really interesting about the intimate partner
of violence, and that's the specificity of it depending on circumstances.
And namely, when the woman gets pregnant, she's more vulnerable to physical violence.
And when the man suspects that he's not the father of that pregnancy, he's more likely
to direct the violence toward blows
to her abdomen.
Okay, that's that's specific.
And so in that case, the function is,
is hypothesized function is to terminate the pregnancy
by arrival male as opposed to deterring the woman
from committing an infidelity or from leaving the relationship entirely.
So that's why one function of inden-bapartor violence is just sequestering the woman and keeping her all to himself.
So it's both to prevent infidelity and to prevent defection.
I have a friend who's wife told me
that if she if he cheats, I'll kill him. That's what she said.
But it's actually just much easier to keep him very, very busy.
And that statement now leaps to mind because of what you're describing. That there are many tactics
by which people can engage this effort to reduce the
mate value discrepancy, not all of which are overtly violent, but all of which are
designed to constrain their behavior.
Right, right.
These were, so these were fall under what I would call mate retention tactics, only one
or two of which fall under the violence category.
Yeah, they're even, yeah.
Within partner psychological manipulations
about these things.
So there are psychological manipulations
about perceived made value.
No one else would want you.
Your loser, there's denigration of partner
within the relationship.
Even feigning anger to make the partner feel guilty about, say, looking at someone else.
So, there's all kinds of
inter-nesting warfare that goes on within relationships to manipulate perceptions of these things.
This is how I'm creating a much too jaded view
of romance and love, I think.
Oh, no, we will get to the happy endings
and long, I mean, there are certainly
many happy relationships out there.
Oh, as a neuroscientist, I hear about this
and the immediacy of how people fall
into a pattern of jealousy or a pattern of cheating and not always.
And it just speaks to a brain circuitry that's evolved to protect something.
And I'm sure this statement is not exhaustive, but I think it's accurate to say that every
species, but especially humans, wants to make more of itself and protect its young.
But these issues of paternity and resource allocation,
I think they're vital.
And I look forward to a day where evolutionary psychology
and neuroscience can merge at the level
of underlying mechanism.
But I don't think it's dark.
I think it's just the way we're wired at some level.
Speaking of dark, could you tell us about the dark triad?
Yeah, so the dark triads, we've been talking about sex differences on average,
but there are critical within sex individual differences.
And the dark triad is one of the most important ones.
The dark triad consists of three personality characteristics.
So narcissism, macchivalentism and psychopathy,
So narcissism, macchivalonism, and psychopathy. Homeworks of narcissism are things like a grandiosity,
the person thinks that they're more intelligent,
more attractive, more dazzling, more charming than they actually are.
I think they're the greatest person since sliced bread.
Importantly, with narcissism, you also get a sense of entitlement.
So they feel entitled to a larger share of the pie, Importantly, with narcissism, you also get a sense of entitlement.
So they feel entitled to a larger share of the pie,
whether that be the financial pie, the status pie, or the sexual pie.
Macchi-evalentism is high scores tend to pursue an exploitative social strategy.
So they might feign cooperation, but then cheat, you know, on subsequent moves.
They view other people as plans to be manipulated for their own instrumental gains.
And then psychopathy, one of the hallmarks of psychopathy is a lack of empathy. So most people
have a normal empathy circuit where if a child falls down and gets hurt, we feel a
compassion for the harm that that person is undergoing. Or if a puppy gets hit by
a car or whatever, we feel compassion. Psychopaths don't. That is those
high on this dimension, it's a dimensional thing. It's not a categorical thing.
So those high on psychopathy, basically lack empathy.
And so if you combine these qualities, narcissism, psychopathy,
and macchi-inventism, you have some very bad dudes.
And I say bad dudes, because Ben Tendis
grew higher in these things than women,
especially on the psychopathy dimension.
So when you talk about clinical levels of psychopathy,
it's estimated to be something like 1% of women
and about 4% of men.
So men are much higher in that.
So why is this important?
Well, it's important in the mating context
because those who are high on dark triad traits tend to be sexual
deceivers for one. So they're very often very charming, very good at seducing women and
then abandoning them, sometimes with after fleecing them or draining their bank account, they're very good at the art of seduction.
They are also tend to be sexual harassers,
serial sexual harassers and sexual coercers.
So when it comes to forms of sexual violence,
high dark triad guys tend to be perpetrators of this.
And so like most men, I think would be, find it ethically abhorrent to sexually harass a woman
in the workplace, dark triad guys, import maybe they feel entitled to it and import they do.
I mean, in some cases that I report in the book, there are like literal descriptions
where the guys are writing in these journals,
oh, I knew she was attracted to me.
You know, that's why she met me in the Xerox room,
just when I was there,
because she wanted to admire my bulging biceps or whatever.
It's all about them.
Yeah, and this gets into a bias that I talk about,
which is the male sexual misperception
bias, where women smiles at a man, man thinks, oh, she wants my body, she's attracted to
me, and women are thinking, oh, I'm just being friendly, I'm being polite or professional.
But these guys, high dark, high guys, are more susceptible to the sexual overperception bias, and they
literally believe that the woman is attracted to them and sending them signals, green light,
to sexually approach.
And so if you combine dark-try traits with the dispositional pursuit of a short-term
mating strategy, that's an especially deadly combination.
That's when you get sexual harassment, sexual coercion.
So these are very bad dudes.
Also, predictors of intimate partner violence.
What approximate frequency in the male population
are these have all three of the dark triad traits?
And I realize that they're on a continuum.
So, yeah, that's why you can't say it. that they're on a continuum, so see how it works.
Yeah, that's why you can't say, because they are on a continuum.
And it's sort of arbitrary where you draw the line.
But I think it's a minority of men.
It's a subset of men who commit the vast majority
of these acts of sexual violence.
And that's why it's not like, if you look at victims
of sexual violence, they're
more enumerous than the perpetrators of sexual violence because the perpetrators tend to be serial
offenders, so to speak. One guy in the workplace harassing 15 different women, one guy sexually
coercing multiple women. So that's why you like, in well-known cases in the news like Harvey Weinstein,
you know, probably over 100 different women
Bill Cosby, Jeffrey Epstein, some of these more famous cases,
these are large number of victims,
but pretty much sole, you know, perpetrators.
And there's no question that these guys,
like Harvey Weinstein and Jeffrey Epstein you know, the perpetrators. And there's no question that these guys,
like Harvey Weinstein and Jeffrey Epstein were definitely high on dark triad traits.
You mentioned stocking briefly.
Maybe we could just talk about some of the
less known features about stocking.
I think I once heard you give a lecture where you said
that one of the scariest things about stalking
is that sometimes it works.
Yes, yeah.
So while stalking has multiple motivations,
but one of the most frequent motivations
is a mating motivation where either there's a breakup
and the woman dumps the guy is a mating motivation where either there's a breakup
and the woman dumps the guy and the guy doesn't wanna get dumped, he wants to maintain a relationship with her.
And I should say that when it comes to criminal stalking,
there's a huge sex difference.
About 80% of the stalkers tend to be men,
about 20% women.
So there are women stalkers,
but they're, you know,
about a fourth, the number compared to men. So the motivation of the guys tends to be either an
attempt to get back together with the woman, either sexually or in a relationship, or, and or to interfere with her future mating prospects.
And it works in some of the time in two senses.
One is it does interfere with her attempts to remade.
So in fact, it scares off some guys.
So like you show up and pick up a woman at her apartment for a date and her ex is sitting
out there glaring at you.
Or, and I'm actually familiar with the circumstance where early in a relationship, somebody mentions
that an ex has made veiled threats about surveillance, for instance.
Yeah.
I've actually had to happen several times in my dating history where someone would say,
you know, you started opening up about previous relationships a little bit as it's appropriate
and someone says, yeah, you know, he mentioned that he was going to, you know, send someone
around to, you know, to surveil me, you know, that kind of thing, which is a very interesting
um, factoid to pick up.
But I heard it enough times,
and people I know have reported hearing this enough times
that I'm guessing that that's probably more frequent
than people actually trailing people in cars
and things of that sort.
But planting that, it's like the psychological
seat of surveillance is a form of harassment in some sense.
Yes, absolutely.
I think that you're right.
I mean, there's that planting the psychological seeds, but then also with surveillance, some surveillance remain hidden, so you don't know
necessarily. Yeah, I confess in this case, it did not act as a deterrent for continuing the
relationship, but that's another story. So how often do women respond, I have to put this in quotes, for those that are listening
air quotes and quotes, positively to stock?
I mean, how often does it work to re-secure the partner after they've been broken up?
Well, so in our studies, it's a minority of cases that it works to reestablish.
I think something like 15% of the time that it works either to
temporarily reestablish a sexual relationship or lure the woman back in for a more permanent
relationship.
So, most of the time it doesn't work.
But one woman in our study said the guy, every time she went out with another guy,
he would threaten the other guy.
And she said after about six months,
there were no other guys.
He'd basically scared off all the other guys.
And so she went back to them
because there were no other guys around.
Yeah, I experienced this one.
I was in college.
I lived in a small town, very population dense.
I live this to UC Santa Barbara.
And there was a couple where every time this woman would date someone, very population dense, Ilovista, UC Santa Barbara.
And there was a couple where every time this woman would date someone,
he'd basically beat up whoever the new suitor was.
And pretty soon, no one would go near them.
They got a reputation as the kind of sit-in Nancy couple.
And indeed, it worked.
It worked in the sense that no one dared go near her
and they ended up together.
So I've seen real life examples of this.
Yeah, so it happens, but it is,
it is in general not a successful strategy.
Oh, no, and it's not when I'm suggesting.
I was just shocked to learn that,
because we hear stalking and we have this,
there's one very extreme image of it,
but the underlying motivations are,
I think, are reveals something about mating dynamics.
Yeah.
And I think that the circumstances are often a mate value discrepancy where the guy realizes
correctly that he will be unable to replace her with a made of equivalent mate value or
in some cases any mate.
It's like, well, she was with me once, maybe she can get her back with me again.
So the psychology is very understandable, but it tends not to work because,
and the other thing we found, we just study of 2,500 victims of stockings,
is with Josh Donnelly, a former student of mine who's now
a professor in a criminology department.
And what we found is there were large, large differences between the stalker and the victim
of the stalker, where the stalker tends to be much lower in mate value than the victim.
And so basically, it's typically the woman who realizes
she can do a lot better on the mating market.
And the guy realizes, I am never going to be able to replace her
with a woman of equivalent mate value.
And so I'm going to use this last ditch desperate measure
to try to get her back.
And occasionally it works. I'm thinking more about this,
mate value thing, this number, this metric,
they 8, 10, 6, whatever it is,
and mate value discrepancy playing such a strong role
in all these dynamics.
I should have asked this earlier,
but what is the impact on
mate value perceived or real of a woman
having already had children?
For instance, their friends of mine who are married
in divorce who have children,
who often post pictures of themselves
with their children in their online profiles,
because it shows a strong sense of paternal instinct.
You know, there's the puppy thing,
people with dogs or puppies demonstrating
a capacity to care and for care-taking.
In women, the opposite is also true.
Women with children show capacity
it demonstrates fertility, at least at one point,
perhaps still fertility that's still present.
Does it positively, negatively, or neutrally impact a woman to already have children when
seeking another mate, regardless of whether or not she was married or had the children out of
whether. Yeah, as a general rule, it decreases for mate value because kids with another mate are viewed as a cost, not a benefit.
And there are costs on multiple dimensions,
one of which they're going to be a cost to the guy
because he's going to have to invest resources, time,
attention, and so forth.
But also a portion of her effort and resources
are going to be devoted toward kids who
are not genetically related to him.
Which is one reason why step families, there's a lot of conflict within step families,
very explicable from an evolutionary perspective. In general, it's a cost not a benefit.
Sometimes it can be a benefit, though. No, one case where a woman got divorced, she had two kids,
and she ended up successfully mating with a guy
who was also divorced and had primary custody of his two kids.
And so there was a compatibility there.
But as a general rule, it will decrease the woman's and the man's made value to have
kids, especially kids who are young and financially dependent.
But what happens is, let's say the woman would be in eight
without kids.
A guy who's a six might be able to attract her
and might feel lucky to attract her,
because there's no way he would have been able to attract her
under other conditions.
But that's why the display of the effort
investing in her kids is often a mating tactic.
He's showing, okay, I'm willing to invest in kids,
I'm willing to sacrifice.
And so they, in essence, become equivalent in mate value
as a result of that.
But will she be able to attract on average,
you know, other aides less likely. But the same is true of guys. And this is why
the reason that affects women more than men is because more custody tends to go with women. That
is the kids women tend to have greater custody and women tend to invest more in the kids
throughout their lives. Now, there are other things like
alimony and child support payments and so forth, but
all the women I've talked to, I had a factor one,
one on one with many women about this,
they view a guy with kids as a cost, not a benefit,
unless the kids are old enough and they've left home,
I don't know, no longer financially dependent.
And everything you just described is consistent with what you said earlier, which is that
with subsequent marriages or as men get older, the tendency is to seek mates that are progressively
younger, right?
Because there's a higher, lower probability they already have children, if they're much
younger.
Right, right.
And if the guy is successful, if he has status and resources and as other qualities associated
with higher mate value, then he will remain attractive to younger women.
I realize it's not your specific area of expertise, but these days there's a lot of discussion
about how early childhood attachment to parents influences mate choice later on.
This kind of general categorization of avoidant and anxious
and anxious avoidant and all this kind of thing.
And again, putting my hat on as a neuroscientist,
I think it makes sense that the neural circuits
for attachment in childhood would be somehow partially
or in whole repurposed for other forms of attachment.
We don't just tend to say, okay,
that brain circuitry was for when I was a kid
and now I'm an adult and so I'll develop
this new attachment circuitry.
I'm guessing it evolves and whatnot.
But is there anything interesting about
that, about childhood attachment strategies,
these are the stability of long-term partner choice,
or is that too big of a leap for us to make here?
Yeah, well, I mean, I can offer some sort of
informed speculation about it.
And as you point out, it's not my area of expertise,
but I know a little bit about it.
And I mean, I think that a secure attachment style, if both partners have a secure
attachment style, that's conducive to a long-term mace-up.
Avoiding attachment styles, avoiding people tend to have more difficulty with intimacy
and also higher probability of infidelity.
And anxious attachment style, I don't know, can create problems of its own, you know, in
the overly clingy, dependent, absorbing what I call high relationship load.
So you know, there's like mutation load, which we all have certain number of mutations.
There's, you know, parasite load.
There's also what I call relationship load.
So what does the baggage that someone brings
to the relationship?
And they're probably correlated with the frequency
of demand of immediate text message responses.
Well, I think the frequency of demand,
like the expected low latency of text message responses
plays out consistently in relationships.
You know, early on, there's a very low expectation of response,
and then as people get attached, depending on their level of anxiety,
if they don't hear back from somebody really quickly,
where the mind goes is a very interesting aspect.
You know, do you become suspicious?
Do you become anxious?
Can you stabilize your own internal milieu,
or do you need to see the dot, dot, dot?
That's coming back.
I'd love to see a study on that at some point.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's a good one.
And my intuition suggests that your prediction
about that would pan out.
It would be the insecure that would really be,
getting upset if there were not that immediate response
to the text.
I have a friend, a female friend who deliberately
quote unquote using her language trains her potential
partners to be comfortable with a variable response latency.
But then I asked her, she's comfortable with a variable response latency.
She said, absolutely not.
So there's an asymmetry, at least in that case.
This is almost certainly a more rare circumstance,
but I'd be remiss if I didn't ask about unconventional relationships.
These days, I don't think it's just by virtue of living in California.
You hear more and more about Minaga Mish as opposed to Minogamas,
and various forms of polyamory
that may or may not include the amery part.
Passes in permission based on season circumstance
and prior infidelities, like, okay,
somebody had a mishap early on, you have one pass,
so to speak, or, and you hear this kind of language getting thrown around.
And it's intriguing to me because it seems like an effort
to bypass some of the more, if you will, hardwired,
or at least culturally hardwired aspects
of mate choice and sexual partner choice.
You know, acknowledging jealousy,
but confronting it by allowing your partner to be with somebody
else, for instance.
I confess I have friends who have unconventional relationships.
I have friends with conventional relationships.
Any thoughts on that, Pauli Amory?
Yeah, yeah, I do have a couple thoughts on it.
I haven't studied it extensively, but I think that the way I would phrase it is that there's an attempt to overcome
certain evolved features of our mating psychology, but often in the service of other aspects of
our mating psychology. So what I mean by that is this. So talk about polyamory. First of all, there's a sex difference on average.
That is men are more likely to want to initiate
a polyamorous relationship than women.
There are lots of exceptions,
and I actually know of at least one exception,
personally, friends of mine who are in a polyamorous relationship.
But the motivation for men is that you've all desire for sexual
variety. So it gives him access to a wider variety of sex partners, which is part of our
evolved sexual psychology, especially for men. Women, one motivation, a women also have
a desire for sexual variety, on average, tends not to be as great as that of men,
but also have it. But some women agree to a polyamous relationship as a mate retention tactic.
That is, this guy, in order to keep him, she has to agree to the relationship. And so,
and so the motivations for engaging in polyamory are somewhat sex differentiated.
On average. Onated. On average.
On average.
On average, who has lots of exceptions.
So now when it comes to sexual jealousy, there is this recognition that there, and in my
way that I would frame it, there's this evolved emotion where we, it triggers sexual jealousy,
senior partner having sex or imagining your partner having sex or be falling in love
with someone else.
But interestingly, and there haven't been studies on this,
but I know of this one polyamorous couple
where they reported to me,
both of them reported to me.
She said, she doesn't bother her at all of her husband.
They're married, has sex with other women.
She, they allow it.
I think it's like every Thursday night
or whatever
they have the different, couples have different rules.
But one time she saw him walking down the street,
hand in hand, affectionately with a former girlfriend,
and she got extremely jealous.
So because it signaled an emotional connection.
So the sexual didn't bother the emotional, it did.
She happened to be bisexual,
and her partner said that it really upset him
when she slept with other men,
but it was fine if she slept with other women.
I think that's a fairly common thing
that among the men that I know
that are in polyamorous relationships,
that that's a fairly common statement.
So he kept trying to,
and he's inter-necine manipulations
trying to encourage her to sleep with other women,
but not with men.
And in her case,
encouraging him not to get emotionally involved with other women,
but the sex was okay.
So I think that,
you know, I think that in the modern environment,
we have a very rich and complicated evolved mating
psychology. What we're doing in these forms are semi-navals because these things have a pretty deep
history themselves. We're attempting to maximize some of our evolved desires while keeping quiescent, other evolved aspects of our
sexual psychology like jealousy.
So satisfying our desire for sexual variety, but keeping jealousy at bay.
And different couples do it in different ways.
So as you alluded to, so I know one couple where live in Los Angeles and the woman from
the woman said, she gives her husband permission,
having a fair sleep with other women
as long as outside of the city limits of LA.
And there's other couple,
it has to be Thursday night.
And so different people have different range of strengths
on, but the constraints are specific
and somewhat arbitrary to the relationship.
Yeah, yeah, they're specific
and often in polyamorous relations,
people talk it out and come to an agreement out,
what is acceptable and what's out of bounds.
But in a way, it's just, we can't change our evolved sexual psychology.
I don't think what we can do is we can activate certain elements
of it and keep others quiescent.
And that's all good.
And in a way, we do in the modern environment,
so even to take it outside of polyamory, pornography,
widely consumed internet pornography,
what does that do?
Well, there's a big sex difference there, Men tend to consume it a lot more than women.
The forms of the pornography are different.
But in a way, the pornography, what it does
is it parasitizes men's evolved desire
for sexual variety.
So they can, in some sense, psychologically
experience a variety of different women sexually
without actually doing it
by just looking at their computer screen.
And so in a way, what you get another way of phrasing that
is that we create modern novel cultural inventions
in ways that satisfy our evolved desires
and are evolved sexual desires.
Yeah, it's interesting with the kind of explosion
of online pornography,
have a colleague at Stanford in psychiatry on a Lemki,
who studies the dopamine system.
And she mentioned two things of interest.
One is that not only is there a tremendous variety
of experiences that are available to people to view
in pornography, but the intensity is also quite high.
So much so that at least for young people who are observing a lot of pornography,
it's possible, and there are studies looking at this now, that their brain circuits become wired
to observing sexual acts as opposed to being engaged in them, which can be extremely problematic.
So it's a sharp blade, so to speak. This pornography thing,
isn't what it once was, and it's evolving quickly. Very interesting. So how should one frame
all this? So I imagine a number of people listening are in relationships or would hope to be in
a relationship, in terms of understanding what we are selecting
for consciously or subconsciously, it seems like there are common themes.
People want to feel attractive and attracted.
People want to make sure that there's stability of the relationship.
So when we hear about security, oftentimes I think of this kind of warm oxytocin,
serotonin, like thing, but this mate value seems so powerful in all this, assessing mate value. So
how objective are people about assessing their own value in terms of finding, securing,
and over time maintaining a relationship, securing is dynamic
because people age at different rates.
Is there an objective metric of this stuff?
I guess you get a lot of statistics about somebody's image and you come up with an average
value based on the population.
But how should people assess themselves?
Because it seems like one of the features
that would be very powerful for leading to happiness of good partner selection, that stable,
where one doesn't have to resort to these Macavelian or Diabolical or any of these other strategies
would be to be very honest with oneself. And how does one do that? Yeah, great questions.
And I don't think that the science has all the answers.
So a couple of things.
So one is that I think people are generally pretty good at self-assessing mate value.
And even self-esteem has been hypothesized to be one
in internal monitoring device that tracks made value.
So when we get a promotion at work or we get a rise in status,
we feel an elevated sense of self-esteem.
We get fired, we get rejected,
we get ostracized our self-esteem plummet.
So our self-evaluation, I think, does track mate value to some extent.
There are people who overestimate their mate value.
People high on narcissism or in particular.
And some people underestimate their mate value.
Another important element is that there's
consensual mate value.
So that is, if you ask the group of 100 people,
there's a fair amount of consensus
that this person's an eight, that person's a six.
But there are also individual differences in mate value.
So one example is I know a woman who's a professor
and she places a high premium on guys
who are deeply steeped in Russian literature, which she is,
so that she can have in-depth conversations about Russian literature.
Note to young men, learn Russian literature.
Well, but this is high, and it's a dimension of make value, this important for her, but
probably not important for a lot of other people.
And so, whereas other people, let's say, might be, let's say you're into football
or some sport, then, and another partner thinks sports are stupid, then that's someone who's
also into sports is going to be higher in mate value for you. So there are these individual
differences in components of mate value, which is good, because that means if everyone were
going after the same people, and there was total consensus on mate value, which is good. Because that means if everyone were going after the same people
and there was total consensus on mate value,
then there would be a lot of mateless people
and a lot of problems in the world
and a lot of dissatisfied people.
So both are important.
The consensual aspects and the individually differentiated
components of made value.
But in terms of accuracy of assessment,
there are no good measures scientifically to do this,
because it's sufficiently complicated.
I mentioned maybe a dozen different components of made value, a physical attract
in this kind of emotional stability, health status, et cetera.
And these aren't the only ones.
So I teach a course on psychology of human mating.
And I ask the people, it's a large course, a couple hundred people, tell me, what do women
want in a mate?
And so I started with the blackboard.
This is back in the old days, when there was a blackboard
at a piece of chalk.
And they say, I want a mate who has a good sense of humor,
sorry, sense of humor.
Intelligent, right, hum, time.
And so I go through this, and I go through five blackboards,
and then I run out of space over what women want.
And then I do the same for men, and men
kind of run out of the space ever about a blackboard and a half. But what that tells me is that these qualities are large in number and complicated
in nature. So you say you want a guy who's a nice and generous and they say, yeah, so like a guy
who at the end of every month takes his whole paycheck and gives it to the the wineau homeless person.
Well, no, not that generous.
Generous toward me, but not toward everyone else.
Nice, in general, but not so nice that they're getting exploited.
So, or even, you know, there's something
you can't be too healthy.
So, people, that's unidimensional,
but you want a guy, women want a guy who's confident,
but not too confident, you know, because
too confident will mean these are arrogant, narcissistic, or not sufficiently manipulable.
So, anyway, so my point is that because there are so many different components of
mate value and that they vary in amount. So it's not just listing the qualities and summing them up.
They vary in amount.
It's a very complicated endeavor to assess accurately.
But I think people have a good intuitive sense
of people's relative of mate value,
especially if you're in a group
and you've been able to interact with them for a long time.
And one indication is, again, that attention structure, how many
other people really want to mate with this person, that's a good cue that they're high in
mate value. Nobody wants to mate with you, then cue that you're low in mate value.
It reminds me of the time when one is trying to decide who to ask to the prom. You know,
there's a complicated assessment based on who one would like to
go with, whether or not you're already partnered, who would say yes, who would say no, because
there's a risk in rejection, too, because that, if I'm guessing correctly, could lower
one's own perceived mate value.
Yeah, it's getting rejected.
Right. Frequency of rejections probably doesn't lend itself well to increasing one's own view
of their mate value.
Right.
Which is why many guys have what I call mating anxiety.
That is, they don't approach them because they risk getting shot down.
They're trying to maintain that number by reducing the amount of data.
Right, yeah. Very interesting.
But it's backfires in the modern environment.
So there's a famous psychologist, Albert Ellis, who had mating anxiety,
and he assigned himself the task of approaching, asking, like, I can't remember what the number
was, but let's say 50 women out on dates. He lived in New York City, so there were a lot of women.
He could just stand still and they would stream past.
And he assigns of like, ask 50 women on a date,
every week, and he said after two weeks,
his mating anxiety disappeared.
Because most of them said buzz off creep,
but he decided, well, actually getting rejected
didn't cause my world to collapse
and it actually was okay.
And so he kind of inert himself to this rejection.
And so he ended up doing quite well in his mating life.
Another point for cognitive behavioral disensitization.
Yes, exactly.
He did ran the experiment.
Just a couple more questions.
Earlier you mentioned self-deception-based deception
or something of that sort, self-deception-based deception or something of that sort, self-deception
that people aren't always trying to
convince somebody else of something that secretly
they know isn't true, but that they deceive themselves.
Could you embellish on that a little bit?
Yes, well, this hypothesis is the famous evolutionary biologist
Robert Triver's first advanced this hypothesis in the preface
1976 to Dawkins book The Selfish Gene, and he subsequently written more about it, both
in scientific article and in a more popular book.
But the idea is that if the core idea is that successful deception is facilitated by self-deception.
So if you really believe that in X, then you're going to be a more successful salesman
to convince other people of X. So if you believe you're, let's say, a tenon-made value, you
truly believe it, even if you're not, I'm going to have a more successful time convincing
you that I am as well.
And so the hypothesis is basically that people self-dissieved in order to increase the effectiveness of actual deception.
But I think that there are people who are... So one other dimension I'll mention too is that as that animals often take each other at
our own word for things.
So if we're self-confident, people assume that we must have the goods to back up that
self-confidence.
If we're equivering massive insecurity, people believe, well, we don't have the goods to
back up anything.
And so people use other people's displays of their self-confidence as a cue to their goods.
It's in general a pretty reliable cue, but then there are overestimates and underestimates,
as we've talked about, like with narcissism.
Yeah, we see this with the job candidates.
You are taught to look very carefully at the application and consider
all aspects.
But ultimately, you consider that also in light of how firmly someone believes in the vision
of what they're trying to bring to the profession.
And that's a, I think, largely a subconscious process and being aware of it can be helpful.
But when somebody's confident, you tend to think that they're gonna get where they say
they're gonna go, and it acts as a bit of a heuristic
for not needing, the impulses that one then doesn't need
to go vet all the information quite as carefully,
but I guess if one is aware of it,
then to dig deeper in, because it seems like
there's a lot of deception going on.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, well, and, you know, and something we talked about earlier,
people high on psychopathy are very good at deception.
I don't know whether they are good at self-deception
or whether they're just really good deceivers, you know.
So, but they can be very effective.
And out in California, you know very effective and out in California. You live out in California.
I'm sure you've seen your fair share of cases like that.
Oh, yeah. I think across today's discussion in a various examples, pop to mind of seeing
these features in humans. It's so interesting. I find the work that you do incredibly interesting.
I think this field of evolutionary psychology is fascinating. I hope, I'll get I said it before,
but I'll say it again, I feel like neuroscience and evolutionary psychology are nudging towards
one another. And it's only a matter of time before they merge in some formal way. I mean, there is
the work, for instance, on polygamist versus monogamous prairie voles
and levels of vasopressin.
But it's a big leap to go from vasopressin
and a prairie vol, no disrespect to that beautiful work,
but to humans and say, oh, vasopressin inhaler
are going to make you monogamous or something.
I think that's probably got the direction of the effect
wrong, but you get the point.
Yeah, no, I think you're absolutely right.
And I think it will happen.
I think it's starting to happen,
and it will happen because getting at the neuroscience
is getting at the underlying mechanisms
that are driving the process.
So what an evolutionary perspective brings to bear
is evolve function and ultimate explanation,
the selective forces that created adaptations,
the functions of those adaptations,
and the neuroscience brings, well, what is the underlying machinery that these mechanisms
are instantiated in?
Yeah, it would be wonderful to collaborate someday.
Maybe we'll do a brain imaging study on jealousy or something in, I don't know, and throw
it.
You're the psychologist.
You would come up with a beautiful experimental design. I'd be certain that people are going to want to learn more about your work.
Certainly, we will give them links to your social media and other sites.
You've written a tremendous number of really interesting books.
Tell us about your most recent book and maybe some of the others that if people are interested
in these topics and they want to learn more that they could explore.
Sure. Okay. So well, my most recent book is called When Men Behave Badly,
the Hidden Roots of Sexual Deception, Harassment, and Assault.
And that book deals with conflict between the sexes, sexual conflict.
And so it deals with them both in what I call mating market conflict. Some of the topics we've been talking about
deception in internet dating and things like that. Second is conflict that occurs within mating
relationships of the sort that we've been talking about as well. Financial infidelity, emotional
infidelity, sexual infidelity, coping with conflict within a relationship. And I actually have some
I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I think, I badly about some of the darker sides of human mating, like intimate partner violence, stalking sexual harassment, sexual coercion.
So that's what that book's about.
And I think it's gotten well-reviewed and people find it very useful in understanding
what is otherwise a lot of baffling phenomena. You know,
why do men and women seem at odds with each other in so many domains? Why do some of these
recurrent forms of sexual conflict occur? So that's what that book's about. My previous book,
so my first book, which I've had the good fortune to be able to revise a couple times,
deals more broadly with human mating strategies.
It's called the evolution of desire, strategies of human mating, and gives people a broad overview
of what people want and are made, tactics of attraction, tactics of mate retention, and so forth
throughout the whole mating process, serial mating, causes of divorce, and so forth. And then,
process, serial mating, causes of divorce and so forth. And then even more broadly, I have a textbook called Evolutionary Psychology, the New Science
of the Mind, which is in its sixth edition right now.
And it's the most widely used textbook in Evolutionary Psychology around North America and
Europe and actually it's been translated even into Arabic and other countries.
So that deals somewhat with mating, but also deals with survival problems,
or evolved fears and phobias, issues about kin and family, extended family, friendships,
social hierarchies, status hierarchies, warfare and other topics.
So the evolutionary psychology textbook is the broadest book and then maybe the second
broadest is the evolution of desire strategies of human mating.
And then for those interested in conflict between the sexes, the latest book, When Men
Behave Badly.
Fantastic.
I love your work.
I'm so grateful for the clarity and depth and rigor
with which you do it and you convey it to us.
I know I speak for many people when I just want to say thank you.
This is a tremendously informative conversation.
Thank you.
It's been a delight to talk with you.
And I hope we do engage in that research collaboration of merging neuroscience and evolutionary
psychology. Let's do it.
All right. Great. Thank you, David. Thank you.
Thank you for joining me for my conversation with Dr. David Bus.
Be sure to check out the link to his website in the show caption and be sure to check out his
new book, When Men Behave Badly, The Hidden Roots of Sexual
Deception, Harassment, and Assault.
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you