Women marry men who look like dad
Young girls form a 'mental model' of their dads which they later
use to help pick a husband, reveals a new study
Women tend to choose husbands who look like their fathers - even
if they are adopted, reveals a new study.
The research shows that women use their dads as a template for
picking a mate by a process called "sexual imprinting",
says Tamas Bereczkei at the University of Pécs in Hungary
and colleagues.
Husbands and wives have long been suggested to look alike and
this is known to occur in many animal species. Couples that look
like each other are also more likely to share common genes, and
having a degree of similarity is believed to beneficial.
This might explain the study's findings, suggests Glenn Weisfeld,
one of the research team and a human ethnologist at Wayne State
University, Detroit, US "There seems to be an advantage for
animals to select a mate somewhat similar to themselves genetically," he
told New Scientist.
"One good possibility is that there are some fortuitous genetic
combinations which are retained in the offspring if both parents
are similar," he says. "In humans there is evidence to
show a lower rate of miscarriage."
However, he points out that there is a balance between the benefits
of marrying someone genetically close and the harmful effects of
inbreeding. "There seems to be an ideal balance, maybe around
the first or second cousin point."
Newborn ducklings
Imprinting is a fast, instinctive form of learning, perhaps best
known from the phenomenon in which newborn ducklings bond with
the first object they see.
To test whether women use imprinting to base their marital choices
on the appearance of their fathers, the researchers took 26 adoptive
families and examined how alike various family members looked.
Using adoptive families meant inherited preferences could be ruled
out.
Nearly 250 students were asked to rate similarities within three
sets of photos. The first showed photos of the wife and four possible
husbands, one of whom was the real spouse.
The second showed a photo of the adoptive father as he would have
looked when his daughter was between two and eight years of age,
and the possible husbands. The third set showed the adoptive mother
and the four possible husbands.
The students correctly matched husbands and wives significantly
more than they would have by chance alone. But the similarity between
husbands and adoptive fathers was most striking. Where the judges
might have matched a quarter of the husbands with the fathers by
chance, they actually matched 38 per cent correctly.
There was no significant resemblance between the husband and the
adoptive mother.
Emotional warmth
An "unexpected" finding, says Weisfeld, was that fathers
who were judged by their daughters to have showed the most emotional
warmth were much more likely to have son-in-laws who looked like
them.
"Our results support the notion of a long-lasting effect
of attachment during childhood on later mating preferences," the
team concludes. They suggest that people form a "mental model" of
their opposite-sex parent's appearance, which they then seek out
in later life.
But Weisfeld points out, that mating decisions are complex in
humans and many other biological and social factors will play a
part. For example, studies have shown that a person's smell can
also help someone judge how related they are to a potential partner.
Journal reference: Proceedings of the Royal Society of London
B (DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2003.2672)
Source: NewScientist.com
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