Login / Signup

Mate assessment based on physical characteristics: a review and reflection.

Christopher D Watkins
Published in: Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society (2024)
Mate choice, and sex differences in romantic behaviours, represented one of the first major applications of evolutionary biology to human behaviour. This paper reviews Darwinian approaches to heterosexual mate assessment based on physical characteristics, placing the literature in its historical context (1871-1979), before turning (predominantly) to psychological research on attractiveness judgements based on physical characteristics. Attractiveness is consistently inferred across multiple modalities, with biological theories explaining why we differentiate certain individuals, on average, from others. Simultaneously, it is a judgement that varies systematically in light of our own traits, environment, and experiences. Over 30 years of research has generated robust effects alongside reasons to be humble in our lack of understanding of the precise physiological mechanisms involved in mate assessment. This review concludes with three questions to focus attention in further research, and proposes that our romantic preferences still provide a critical window into the evolution of human sexuality.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • endothelial cells
  • physical activity
  • systematic review
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • pluripotent stem cells
  • working memory
  • depressive symptoms
  • decision making
  • dna methylation