Preprint of "The Impact of Mate Value in First and Subsequent Real-Life Romantic Encounters" [post]

Stefanie N. Wurst, Sarah Humberg, Mitja Back
2018 unpublished
We provide a first systematic investigation of the most prominent hypotheses about the impact of mate value on interpersonal attraction in real-life early-stage romantic encounters. Using Response Surface Analysis, we simultaneously examined how (a) people's perception of their own mate value, (b) their perception of a potential partner's mate value, and (c) the interplay between the two mate values impact initial romantic attraction and selection as well as subsequent interpersonal outcomes
more » ... er selection. Data came from the "Date me for Science" speed-dating study (n = 398), in which participants who mutually selected each other at the speed-dating event were followed up with 3 assessments in the 6 weeks after the event to assess subsequent outcomes. Participants' romantic attraction, likelihood of selecting, and subsequent interpersonal outcomes with a dating partner almost exclusively depended on their perception of their dating partner's mate value: the higher, the better. There was no evidence for the popular matching hypothesis, which states that people feel attracted to and select dating partners whom they perceive to have a mate value similar to their own. Implications of these findings for theory and research on the impact of mate value on romantic attraction and selection are discussed.
doi:10.31219/osf.io/adej3 fatcat:ydjqju7k6jh57cvbxmumh2b2ne