Reproductive Strategy and Sexual Conflict Slow Life History Strategy Inihibts Negative Androcentrism

Paul R. Gladden, Aurelio José Figueredo, D. J. Andrejzak, Dan Nelson Jones, Vanessa Smith-Castro

Abstract


Recent findings indicate that a slow Life History (LH) strategy factor is associated with increased levels of Executive Functioning (EF), increased emotional intelligence, decreased levels of sexually coercive behaviors, and decreased levels of negative ethnocentrism. Based on these findings, as well as the generative theory, we predicted that slow LH strategy should inhibit negative androcentrism (bias against women). A sample of undergraduates responded to a battery of questionnaires measuring various facets of their LH Strategy, (e.g., sociosexual orientation, mating effort, mate-value, psychopathy, executive functioning, and emotional intelligence) and various convergent measures of Negative Androcentrism. A structural model that the data fit well indicated a latent protective LH strategy trait predicted decreased negative androcentrism. This trait fully mediated the relationship between participant biological sex and androcentrism. We suggest that slow LH strategy may inhibit negative attitudes toward women because of relatively decreased intrasexual competition and intersexual conflict among slow LH strategists.

 

DOI:10.2458/azu_jmmss_v4i1_gladden


Keywords


Life History, Androcentrism, Sexual Conflict

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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/v4i1.17774