Sex Differences in Mate Preferences Across 45 Countries: a Large-Scale Replication

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Date

2020

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Sage Publications Inc

Open Access Color

BRONZE

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

739

OpenAIRE Views

117

Publicly Funded

No
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Top 0.1%
Influence
Top 10%
Popularity
Top 0.1%

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Journal Issue

Abstract

Considerable research has examined human mate preferences across cultures, finding universal sex differences in preferences for attractiveness and resources as well as sources of systematic cultural variation. Two competing perspectives-an evolutionary psychological perspective and a biosocial role perspective-offer alternative explanations for these findings. However, the original data on which each perspective relies are decades old, and the literature is fraught with conflicting methods, analyses, results, and conclusions. Using a new 45-country sample (N = 14,399), we attempted to replicate classic studies and test both the evolutionary and biosocial role perspectives. Support for universal sex differences in preferences remains robust: Men, more than women, prefer attractive, young mates, and women, more than men, prefer older mates with financial prospects. Cross-culturally, both sexes have mates closer to their own ages as gender equality increases. Beyond age of partner, neither pathogen prevalence nor gender equality robustly predicted sex differences or preferences across countries.

Description

Keywords

mate preferences, sex differences, cross-cultural studies, evolutionary psychology, biosocial role theory, open data, preregistered, Gap-Predicts-Degree, Cultural Variation, Differentiation, sex differences, Male, CULTURAL VARIATION, 330, BF Psychology, Sexual Behavior, 150, open data, Evolutionary psychology, Preregistered, preregistered, 501021 Social psychology, Cross-cultural studies, Domínio/Área Científica::Ciências Sociais::Psicologia, Sex differences, Humans, Marriage, Mate preferences, 360, Biosocial role theory, Sex Characteristics, biosocial role theory, SDG 5 - Gender Equality, Open data, GAP-PREDICTS-DEGREE, SDG 10 – Weniger Ungleichheiten, SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities, Biological Evolution, mate preferences, sex differences, cross-cultural studies, evolutionary psychology, biosocial role theory, open data, preregistered, DIFFERENTIATION, mate preferences, SDG 5 – Geschlechtergleichheit, mate preferences; sex differences; cross-cultural studies; evolutionary psychology; biosocial role theory; open data; preregistered, 501021 Sozialpsychologie, Female, cross-cultural studies, evolutionary psychology

Fields of Science

0501 psychology and cognitive sciences, 05 social sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Q1
OpenCitations Logo
OpenCitations Citation Count
192

Source

Psychologıcal Scıence

Volume

31

Issue

4

Start Page

408

End Page

423
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Citations

CrossRef : 183

PubMed : 76

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Mendeley Readers : 301

SCOPUS™ Citations

255

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Web of Science™ Citations

210

checked on Mar 22, 2026

Page Views

4

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Downloads

27

checked on Mar 22, 2026

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